@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref19157,
author = {James D. Lawrey and Paul Diederich and Matthew P. Nelsen and Masoumeh Sikaroodi and Patrick M. Gillevet and Maarten Brand and Pieter Van den Boom},
title = {The obligately lichenicolous genus Lichenoconium represents a novel lineage in the Dothideomycetes.},
year = {2011},
keywords = {Anamorphic fungi, Coelomycetes, Conidial fungi, Mitosporic fungi.},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Fungal Biology},
volume = {115},
number = {},
pages = {176--187},
abstract = {Lichenicolous fungi are obligately lichen-associated organisms that have evolved many times throughout the Ascomycota and Basidiomycota. Approximately 20 % of lichenicolous ascomycetes are recognized only from asexual (anamorphic) characteristics, so the phylogenetic position of many groups has never been resolved. Here we present the first molecular phylogeny of Lichenoconium, a genus of strictly asexual, obligately lichenicolous species with broad geographic distributions and diverse host ecologies. We obtained nuclear and mitochondrial rDNA sequences from fungal cultures isolated from four species in the genus, including a new species, Lichenoconium aeruginosum sp. nov., collected in France, Luxembourg and Netherlands. Our multilocus phylogeny supports the monophyly of fungi in the genus Lichenoconium, and places the genus in the Dothideomycetes, an ascomycete class made up mainly of saprobes and plant-associated endophytes and pathogens. There are only a few recognized groups of lichen-formers in the Dothideomycetes, but Lichenoconium is not supported as being closely related to any of these, nor to any other recognized order within the Dothideomycetes. Given that Lichenoconium is but one of over 100 genera of anamorphic lichenicolous fungi, most of which have never been studied phylogenetically, we suggest that asexual lichenicolous fungi may represent novel and evolutionarily significant phylogenetic groups in the Kingdom Fungi.}
}
Citation for Study 10803
Citation title:
"The obligately lichenicolous genus Lichenoconium represents a novel lineage in the Dothideomycetes.".
Study name:
"The obligately lichenicolous genus Lichenoconium represents a novel lineage in the Dothideomycetes.".
This study is part of submission 10793
(Status: Published).
Citation
Lawrey J., Diederich P., Nelsen M., Sikaroodi M., Gillevet P., Brand M., & Van den boom P. 2011. The obligately lichenicolous genus Lichenoconium represents a novel lineage in the Dothideomycetes. Fungal Biology, 115: 176-187.
Authors
-
Lawrey J.
-
Diederich P.
-
Nelsen M.
-
Sikaroodi M.
-
Gillevet P.
-
Brand M.
-
Van den boom P.
Abstract
Lichenicolous fungi are obligately lichen-associated organisms that have evolved many times throughout the Ascomycota and Basidiomycota. Approximately 20 % of lichenicolous ascomycetes are recognized only from asexual (anamorphic) characteristics, so the phylogenetic position of many groups has never been resolved. Here we present the first molecular phylogeny of Lichenoconium, a genus of strictly asexual, obligately lichenicolous species with broad geographic distributions and diverse host ecologies. We obtained nuclear and mitochondrial rDNA sequences from fungal cultures isolated from four species in the genus, including a new species, Lichenoconium aeruginosum sp. nov., collected in France, Luxembourg and Netherlands. Our multilocus phylogeny supports the monophyly of fungi in the genus Lichenoconium, and places the genus in the Dothideomycetes, an ascomycete class made up mainly of saprobes and plant-associated endophytes and pathogens. There are only a few recognized groups of lichen-formers in the Dothideomycetes, but Lichenoconium is not supported as being closely related to any of these, nor to any other recognized order within the Dothideomycetes. Given that Lichenoconium is but one of over 100 genera of anamorphic lichenicolous fungi, most of which have never been studied phylogenetically, we suggest that asexual lichenicolous fungi may represent novel and evolutionarily significant phylogenetic groups in the Kingdom Fungi.
Keywords
Anamorphic fungi, Coelomycetes, Conidial fungi, Mitosporic fungi.
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S10803
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref19157,
author = {James D. Lawrey and Paul Diederich and Matthew P. Nelsen and Masoumeh Sikaroodi and Patrick M. Gillevet and Maarten Brand and Pieter Van den Boom},
title = {The obligately lichenicolous genus Lichenoconium represents a novel lineage in the Dothideomycetes.},
year = {2011},
keywords = {Anamorphic fungi, Coelomycetes, Conidial fungi, Mitosporic fungi.},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Fungal Biology},
volume = {115},
number = {},
pages = {176--187},
abstract = {Lichenicolous fungi are obligately lichen-associated organisms that have evolved many times throughout the Ascomycota and Basidiomycota. Approximately 20 % of lichenicolous ascomycetes are recognized only from asexual (anamorphic) characteristics, so the phylogenetic position of many groups has never been resolved. Here we present the first molecular phylogeny of Lichenoconium, a genus of strictly asexual, obligately lichenicolous species with broad geographic distributions and diverse host ecologies. We obtained nuclear and mitochondrial rDNA sequences from fungal cultures isolated from four species in the genus, including a new species, Lichenoconium aeruginosum sp. nov., collected in France, Luxembourg and Netherlands. Our multilocus phylogeny supports the monophyly of fungi in the genus Lichenoconium, and places the genus in the Dothideomycetes, an ascomycete class made up mainly of saprobes and plant-associated endophytes and pathogens. There are only a few recognized groups of lichen-formers in the Dothideomycetes, but Lichenoconium is not supported as being closely related to any of these, nor to any other recognized order within the Dothideomycetes. Given that Lichenoconium is but one of over 100 genera of anamorphic lichenicolous fungi, most of which have never been studied phylogenetically, we suggest that asexual lichenicolous fungi may represent novel and evolutionarily significant phylogenetic groups in the Kingdom Fungi.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 19157
AU - Lawrey,James D.
AU - Diederich,Paul
AU - Nelsen,Matthew P.
AU - Sikaroodi,Masoumeh
AU - Gillevet,Patrick M.
AU - Brand,Maarten
AU - Van den Boom,Pieter
T1 - The obligately lichenicolous genus Lichenoconium represents a novel lineage in the Dothideomycetes.
PY - 2011
KW - Anamorphic fungi
KW - Coelomycetes
KW - Conidial fungi
KW - Mitosporic fungi.
UR - http://dx.doi.org/
N2 - Lichenicolous fungi are obligately lichen-associated organisms that have evolved many times throughout the Ascomycota and Basidiomycota. Approximately 20 % of lichenicolous ascomycetes are recognized only from asexual (anamorphic) characteristics, so the phylogenetic position of many groups has never been resolved. Here we present the first molecular phylogeny of Lichenoconium, a genus of strictly asexual, obligately lichenicolous species with broad geographic distributions and diverse host ecologies. We obtained nuclear and mitochondrial rDNA sequences from fungal cultures isolated from four species in the genus, including a new species, Lichenoconium aeruginosum sp. nov., collected in France, Luxembourg and Netherlands. Our multilocus phylogeny supports the monophyly of fungi in the genus Lichenoconium, and places the genus in the Dothideomycetes, an ascomycete class made up mainly of saprobes and plant-associated endophytes and pathogens. There are only a few recognized groups of lichen-formers in the Dothideomycetes, but Lichenoconium is not supported as being closely related to any of these, nor to any other recognized order within the Dothideomycetes. Given that Lichenoconium is but one of over 100 genera of anamorphic lichenicolous fungi, most of which have never been studied phylogenetically, we suggest that asexual lichenicolous fungi may represent novel and evolutionarily significant phylogenetic groups in the Kingdom Fungi.
L3 -
JF - Fungal Biology
VL - 115
IS -
SP - 176
EP - 187
ER -