@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref17282,
author = {Barbara A. Roy and Detlev R. Vogler and Thomas D. Bruns and T. M. Szaro},
title = {Cryptic Species in the Puccinia monoica complex.},
year = {1998},
keywords = {Arabis; mimicry; molecular phylogeny; Puccinia thlaspeos; rust fungi; Tranzschel's Law},
doi = {},
url = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/3761326},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycologia},
volume = {90},
number = {5},
pages = {846--853},
abstract = {The Puccinia monoica complex is an enigmatic group of rust fungi. They are flower mimics, and they greatly reduce host reproduction and survival. They are relatively common, attacking approximately 960 species in 11 genera of crucifers as well as at least five genera of grasses. In modern taxonomic treatments the Puccinia monoica complex is treated as four species that are differentiated by the number of spore states in their life cycles. However, other systematic treatments have divided the group into species or forms based on host association. Within the species based on spore state there is morphological variation, but it has not been readily assignable to either host species or geographic area. We used DNA sequencing and phylogenetic analysis to determine whether there are cryptic species in this group that are not evident when only morphology is used. We sequenced the nuclear rDNA region containing the internal transcribed spacers (ITS-1+5.8S gene + ITS-2) of isolates from different hosts. Our results indicate that there are cryptic species in the Puccinia monoica complex, and that species in this group cannot be identified strictly by life cycle stage.}
}
Citation for Study 294
Citation title:
"Cryptic Species in the Puccinia monoica complex.".
This study was previously identified under the legacy study ID S4x10x98c11c15c13
(Status: Published).
Citation
Roy B., Vogler D., Bruns T., & Szaro T. 1998. Cryptic Species in the Puccinia monoica complex. Mycologia, 90(5): 846-853.
Authors
-
Roy B.
-
Vogler D.
-
Bruns T.
-
Szaro T.
Abstract
The Puccinia monoica complex is an enigmatic group of rust fungi. They are flower mimics, and they greatly reduce host reproduction and survival. They are relatively common, attacking approximately 960 species in 11 genera of crucifers as well as at least five genera of grasses. In modern taxonomic treatments the Puccinia monoica complex is treated as four species that are differentiated by the number of spore states in their life cycles. However, other systematic treatments have divided the group into species or forms based on host association. Within the species based on spore state there is morphological variation, but it has not been readily assignable to either host species or geographic area. We used DNA sequencing and phylogenetic analysis to determine whether there are cryptic species in this group that are not evident when only morphology is used. We sequenced the nuclear rDNA region containing the internal transcribed spacers (ITS-1+5.8S gene + ITS-2) of isolates from different hosts. Our results indicate that there are cryptic species in the Puccinia monoica complex, and that species in this group cannot be identified strictly by life cycle stage.
Keywords
Arabis; mimicry; molecular phylogeny; Puccinia thlaspeos; rust fungi; Tranzschel's Law
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S294
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref17282,
author = {Barbara A. Roy and Detlev R. Vogler and Thomas D. Bruns and T. M. Szaro},
title = {Cryptic Species in the Puccinia monoica complex.},
year = {1998},
keywords = {Arabis; mimicry; molecular phylogeny; Puccinia thlaspeos; rust fungi; Tranzschel's Law},
doi = {},
url = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/3761326},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycologia},
volume = {90},
number = {5},
pages = {846--853},
abstract = {The Puccinia monoica complex is an enigmatic group of rust fungi. They are flower mimics, and they greatly reduce host reproduction and survival. They are relatively common, attacking approximately 960 species in 11 genera of crucifers as well as at least five genera of grasses. In modern taxonomic treatments the Puccinia monoica complex is treated as four species that are differentiated by the number of spore states in their life cycles. However, other systematic treatments have divided the group into species or forms based on host association. Within the species based on spore state there is morphological variation, but it has not been readily assignable to either host species or geographic area. We used DNA sequencing and phylogenetic analysis to determine whether there are cryptic species in this group that are not evident when only morphology is used. We sequenced the nuclear rDNA region containing the internal transcribed spacers (ITS-1+5.8S gene + ITS-2) of isolates from different hosts. Our results indicate that there are cryptic species in the Puccinia monoica complex, and that species in this group cannot be identified strictly by life cycle stage.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 17282
AU - Roy,Barbara A.
AU - Vogler,Detlev R.
AU - Bruns,Thomas D.
AU - Szaro,T. M.
T1 - Cryptic Species in the Puccinia monoica complex.
PY - 1998
KW - Arabis; mimicry; molecular phylogeny; Puccinia thlaspeos; rust fungi; Tranzschel's Law
UR - http://www.jstor.org/stable/3761326
N2 - The Puccinia monoica complex is an enigmatic group of rust fungi. They are flower mimics, and they greatly reduce host reproduction and survival. They are relatively common, attacking approximately 960 species in 11 genera of crucifers as well as at least five genera of grasses. In modern taxonomic treatments the Puccinia monoica complex is treated as four species that are differentiated by the number of spore states in their life cycles. However, other systematic treatments have divided the group into species or forms based on host association. Within the species based on spore state there is morphological variation, but it has not been readily assignable to either host species or geographic area. We used DNA sequencing and phylogenetic analysis to determine whether there are cryptic species in this group that are not evident when only morphology is used. We sequenced the nuclear rDNA region containing the internal transcribed spacers (ITS-1+5.8S gene + ITS-2) of isolates from different hosts. Our results indicate that there are cryptic species in the Puccinia monoica complex, and that species in this group cannot be identified strictly by life cycle stage.
L3 -
JF - Mycologia
VL - 90
IS - 5
SP - 846
EP - 853
ER -