@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref2135,
author = {Sanna Huttunen and Dietmar Quandt and Michael Stech and Ray Tangney},
title = {Back to the future?: molecules take us back to the 1925 classification of the Lembophyllaceae (Bryopsida).},
year = {2008},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Systematic Botany},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Although the Lembophyllaceae has undergone considerable revision during the last century, the generic and familial level relationships of this pleurocarpous moss family are still poorly understood. To address this problem, a generic revision of the Lembophyllaceae based on molecular data was undertaken. We analyzed two plastid markers, the trnL-trnF and the psbT-psbH region in combination with the ITS2 of nuclear ribosomal DNA. The molecular data reveal that the current circumscription of the family is too narrow and that several genera previously placed in the Lembophyllaceae should be re-included. The family includes: Bestia, Camptochaete, Dolichomitra, Dolichomitriopsis, Fallaciella, Fifea, Isothecium, Lembophyllum, Looseria stat. nov., Pilotrichella, Rigodium, Tripterocladium and Weymouthia. Looseria contains a single species: Looseria orbiculata comb. nov. Acrocladium is excluded and provisionally accommodated in the Lepyrodontaceae. Generic limits supported by the molecular data suggest a return to the early twentieth century family concept of Brotherus. The analyses indicate that the segregate genus Orthostichella is very distinct from its parent genus Pilotrichella, probably at the family level. Whereas Pilotrichella is resolved within the Lembophyllaceae, Orthostichella clusters with Porotrichum and Porothamnium forming a clade (OPP-clade) sister to the remaining Neckeraceae and Lembophyllaceae. Hence, the Neckeraceae is paraphyletic. Recognition of the OPP -clade as a new family is desirable but awaits the results of detailed ongoing morphological studies.}
}
Citation for Study 2198
Citation title:
"Back to the future?: molecules take us back to the 1925 classification of the Lembophyllaceae (Bryopsida).".
This study was previously identified under the legacy study ID S2206
(Status: Published).
Citation
Huttunen S., Quandt D., Stech M., & Tangney R. 2008. Back to the future?: molecules take us back to the 1925 classification of the Lembophyllaceae (Bryopsida). Systematic Botany, null.
Authors
-
Huttunen S.
-
Quandt D.
-
Stech M.
-
Tangney R.
Abstract
Although the Lembophyllaceae has undergone considerable revision during the last century, the generic and familial level relationships of this pleurocarpous moss family are still poorly understood. To address this problem, a generic revision of the Lembophyllaceae based on molecular data was undertaken. We analyzed two plastid markers, the trnL-trnF and the psbT-psbH region in combination with the ITS2 of nuclear ribosomal DNA. The molecular data reveal that the current circumscription of the family is too narrow and that several genera previously placed in the Lembophyllaceae should be re-included. The family includes: Bestia, Camptochaete, Dolichomitra, Dolichomitriopsis, Fallaciella, Fifea, Isothecium, Lembophyllum, Looseria stat. nov., Pilotrichella, Rigodium, Tripterocladium and Weymouthia. Looseria contains a single species: Looseria orbiculata comb. nov. Acrocladium is excluded and provisionally accommodated in the Lepyrodontaceae. Generic limits supported by the molecular data suggest a return to the early twentieth century family concept of Brotherus. The analyses indicate that the segregate genus Orthostichella is very distinct from its parent genus Pilotrichella, probably at the family level. Whereas Pilotrichella is resolved within the Lembophyllaceae, Orthostichella clusters with Porotrichum and Porothamnium forming a clade (OPP-clade) sister to the remaining Neckeraceae and Lembophyllaceae. Hence, the Neckeraceae is paraphyletic. Recognition of the OPP -clade as a new family is desirable but awaits the results of detailed ongoing morphological studies.
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S2198
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- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref2135,
author = {Sanna Huttunen and Dietmar Quandt and Michael Stech and Ray Tangney},
title = {Back to the future?: molecules take us back to the 1925 classification of the Lembophyllaceae (Bryopsida).},
year = {2008},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Systematic Botany},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Although the Lembophyllaceae has undergone considerable revision during the last century, the generic and familial level relationships of this pleurocarpous moss family are still poorly understood. To address this problem, a generic revision of the Lembophyllaceae based on molecular data was undertaken. We analyzed two plastid markers, the trnL-trnF and the psbT-psbH region in combination with the ITS2 of nuclear ribosomal DNA. The molecular data reveal that the current circumscription of the family is too narrow and that several genera previously placed in the Lembophyllaceae should be re-included. The family includes: Bestia, Camptochaete, Dolichomitra, Dolichomitriopsis, Fallaciella, Fifea, Isothecium, Lembophyllum, Looseria stat. nov., Pilotrichella, Rigodium, Tripterocladium and Weymouthia. Looseria contains a single species: Looseria orbiculata comb. nov. Acrocladium is excluded and provisionally accommodated in the Lepyrodontaceae. Generic limits supported by the molecular data suggest a return to the early twentieth century family concept of Brotherus. The analyses indicate that the segregate genus Orthostichella is very distinct from its parent genus Pilotrichella, probably at the family level. Whereas Pilotrichella is resolved within the Lembophyllaceae, Orthostichella clusters with Porotrichum and Porothamnium forming a clade (OPP-clade) sister to the remaining Neckeraceae and Lembophyllaceae. Hence, the Neckeraceae is paraphyletic. Recognition of the OPP -clade as a new family is desirable but awaits the results of detailed ongoing morphological studies.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 2135
AU - Huttunen,Sanna
AU - Quandt,Dietmar
AU - Stech,Michael
AU - Tangney,Ray
T1 - Back to the future?: molecules take us back to the 1925 classification of the Lembophyllaceae (Bryopsida).
PY - 2008
KW -
UR -
N2 - Although the Lembophyllaceae has undergone considerable revision during the last century, the generic and familial level relationships of this pleurocarpous moss family are still poorly understood. To address this problem, a generic revision of the Lembophyllaceae based on molecular data was undertaken. We analyzed two plastid markers, the trnL-trnF and the psbT-psbH region in combination with the ITS2 of nuclear ribosomal DNA. The molecular data reveal that the current circumscription of the family is too narrow and that several genera previously placed in the Lembophyllaceae should be re-included. The family includes: Bestia, Camptochaete, Dolichomitra, Dolichomitriopsis, Fallaciella, Fifea, Isothecium, Lembophyllum, Looseria stat. nov., Pilotrichella, Rigodium, Tripterocladium and Weymouthia. Looseria contains a single species: Looseria orbiculata comb. nov. Acrocladium is excluded and provisionally accommodated in the Lepyrodontaceae. Generic limits supported by the molecular data suggest a return to the early twentieth century family concept of Brotherus. The analyses indicate that the segregate genus Orthostichella is very distinct from its parent genus Pilotrichella, probably at the family level. Whereas Pilotrichella is resolved within the Lembophyllaceae, Orthostichella clusters with Porotrichum and Porothamnium forming a clade (OPP-clade) sister to the remaining Neckeraceae and Lembophyllaceae. Hence, the Neckeraceae is paraphyletic. Recognition of the OPP -clade as a new family is desirable but awaits the results of detailed ongoing morphological studies.
L3 -
JF - Systematic Botany
VL -
IS -
ER -