@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref21749,
author = {Jan Vondrak and Ivan Frolov and Pavel Riha and Pavel Hrouzek and Zden?k Palice and Olga Nadyeina and Gokhan Halici and Alexander Khodosovtsev and Claude Roux},
title = {New discoveries in biodiversity of Teloschistaceae lichen crusts in Central Europe north of the Alps},
year = {2013},
keywords = {biodiversity, biogeography, ITS phylogeny, lichen phenotype evaluation, species recognition, vegetative reproduction},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Fungal Diversity},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Central Europe is poor in Teloschistaceae lichen crusts (Caloplaca s.lat.), but their diversity is increased by marginal occurrences of some Arctic, Mediterranean and continental species. Examples include: (1) Caloplaca interfulgens, previously known from arid territories of northern Africa, Mediterranean Europe and western Asia, is recorded from many sites in Central and Eastern Europe; (2) Caloplaca scabrosa, previously known only from Svalbard, is recorded from the Sudetes in the Czech Republic; (3) Caloplaca substerilis, newly described below, is related to C. ulcerosa but well-distinguishable by phenotypic characters. While C. ulcerosa has a maritime distribution in Europe, C. substerilis is typically a continental species. North American continental lichens called "C. ulcerosa" are phylogenetically closer and more similar to C. substerilis; (4) Caloplaca emilii, newly described below, is the Mediterranean species closely related to C. areolata. It rarely occurs in higher latitudes in Austria, the Czech Republic and Germany; (5) Caloplaca molariformis, newly described below, is a continental species with a marginal occurrence in southern Slovakia; it belongs to the subgenus Pyrenodesmia and is characterized by its thick thallus with fungal and algal tissues arranged in high stacks. The positions within Teloschistaceae of the taxa considered are demonstrated by ITS phylogenies. The distributions of C. areolata, C. emilii and C. interfulgens are mapped. The new species are fully described using more than hundred phenotype characters, and diagnostic characters are indicated separately.}
}
Citation for Study 13908
Citation title:
"New discoveries in biodiversity of Teloschistaceae lichen crusts in Central Europe north of the Alps".
Study name:
"New discoveries in biodiversity of Teloschistaceae lichen crusts in Central Europe north of the Alps".
This study is part of submission 13908
(Status: Published).
Citation
Vondrak J., Frolov I., Riha P., Hrouzek P., Palice Z., Nadyeina O., Halici G., Khodosovtsev A., & Roux C. 2013. New discoveries in biodiversity of Teloschistaceae lichen crusts in Central Europe north of the Alps. Fungal Diversity, .
Authors
-
Vondrak J.
-
Frolov I.
-
Riha P.
-
Hrouzek P.
-
Palice Z.
-
Nadyeina O.
-
Halici G.
-
Khodosovtsev A.
-
Roux C.
Abstract
Central Europe is poor in Teloschistaceae lichen crusts (Caloplaca s.lat.), but their diversity is increased by marginal occurrences of some Arctic, Mediterranean and continental species. Examples include: (1) Caloplaca interfulgens, previously known from arid territories of northern Africa, Mediterranean Europe and western Asia, is recorded from many sites in Central and Eastern Europe; (2) Caloplaca scabrosa, previously known only from Svalbard, is recorded from the Sudetes in the Czech Republic; (3) Caloplaca substerilis, newly described below, is related to C. ulcerosa but well-distinguishable by phenotypic characters. While C. ulcerosa has a maritime distribution in Europe, C. substerilis is typically a continental species. North American continental lichens called "C. ulcerosa" are phylogenetically closer and more similar to C. substerilis; (4) Caloplaca emilii, newly described below, is the Mediterranean species closely related to C. areolata. It rarely occurs in higher latitudes in Austria, the Czech Republic and Germany; (5) Caloplaca molariformis, newly described below, is a continental species with a marginal occurrence in southern Slovakia; it belongs to the subgenus Pyrenodesmia and is characterized by its thick thallus with fungal and algal tissues arranged in high stacks. The positions within Teloschistaceae of the taxa considered are demonstrated by ITS phylogenies. The distributions of C. areolata, C. emilii and C. interfulgens are mapped. The new species are fully described using more than hundred phenotype characters, and diagnostic characters are indicated separately.
Keywords
biodiversity, biogeography, ITS phylogeny, lichen phenotype evaluation, species recognition, vegetative reproduction
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S13908
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref21749,
author = {Jan Vondrak and Ivan Frolov and Pavel Riha and Pavel Hrouzek and Zden?k Palice and Olga Nadyeina and Gokhan Halici and Alexander Khodosovtsev and Claude Roux},
title = {New discoveries in biodiversity of Teloschistaceae lichen crusts in Central Europe north of the Alps},
year = {2013},
keywords = {biodiversity, biogeography, ITS phylogeny, lichen phenotype evaluation, species recognition, vegetative reproduction},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Fungal Diversity},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Central Europe is poor in Teloschistaceae lichen crusts (Caloplaca s.lat.), but their diversity is increased by marginal occurrences of some Arctic, Mediterranean and continental species. Examples include: (1) Caloplaca interfulgens, previously known from arid territories of northern Africa, Mediterranean Europe and western Asia, is recorded from many sites in Central and Eastern Europe; (2) Caloplaca scabrosa, previously known only from Svalbard, is recorded from the Sudetes in the Czech Republic; (3) Caloplaca substerilis, newly described below, is related to C. ulcerosa but well-distinguishable by phenotypic characters. While C. ulcerosa has a maritime distribution in Europe, C. substerilis is typically a continental species. North American continental lichens called "C. ulcerosa" are phylogenetically closer and more similar to C. substerilis; (4) Caloplaca emilii, newly described below, is the Mediterranean species closely related to C. areolata. It rarely occurs in higher latitudes in Austria, the Czech Republic and Germany; (5) Caloplaca molariformis, newly described below, is a continental species with a marginal occurrence in southern Slovakia; it belongs to the subgenus Pyrenodesmia and is characterized by its thick thallus with fungal and algal tissues arranged in high stacks. The positions within Teloschistaceae of the taxa considered are demonstrated by ITS phylogenies. The distributions of C. areolata, C. emilii and C. interfulgens are mapped. The new species are fully described using more than hundred phenotype characters, and diagnostic characters are indicated separately.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 21749
AU - Vondrak,Jan
AU - Frolov,Ivan
AU - Riha,Pavel
AU - Hrouzek,Pavel
AU - Palice,Zden?k
AU - Nadyeina,Olga
AU - Halici,Gokhan
AU - Khodosovtsev,Alexander
AU - Roux,Claude
T1 - New discoveries in biodiversity of Teloschistaceae lichen crusts in Central Europe north of the Alps
PY - 2013
KW - biodiversity
KW - biogeography
KW - ITS phylogeny
KW - lichen phenotype evaluation
KW - species recognition
KW - vegetative reproduction
UR - http://dx.doi.org/
N2 - Central Europe is poor in Teloschistaceae lichen crusts (Caloplaca s.lat.), but their diversity is increased by marginal occurrences of some Arctic, Mediterranean and continental species. Examples include: (1) Caloplaca interfulgens, previously known from arid territories of northern Africa, Mediterranean Europe and western Asia, is recorded from many sites in Central and Eastern Europe; (2) Caloplaca scabrosa, previously known only from Svalbard, is recorded from the Sudetes in the Czech Republic; (3) Caloplaca substerilis, newly described below, is related to C. ulcerosa but well-distinguishable by phenotypic characters. While C. ulcerosa has a maritime distribution in Europe, C. substerilis is typically a continental species. North American continental lichens called "C. ulcerosa" are phylogenetically closer and more similar to C. substerilis; (4) Caloplaca emilii, newly described below, is the Mediterranean species closely related to C. areolata. It rarely occurs in higher latitudes in Austria, the Czech Republic and Germany; (5) Caloplaca molariformis, newly described below, is a continental species with a marginal occurrence in southern Slovakia; it belongs to the subgenus Pyrenodesmia and is characterized by its thick thallus with fungal and algal tissues arranged in high stacks. The positions within Teloschistaceae of the taxa considered are demonstrated by ITS phylogenies. The distributions of C. areolata, C. emilii and C. interfulgens are mapped. The new species are fully described using more than hundred phenotype characters, and diagnostic characters are indicated separately.
L3 -
JF - Fungal Diversity
VL -
IS -
ER -