@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref20546,
author = {Yuko Ota and Takashi Yamanaka and Hitoshi Murata and Hitoshi neda},
title = {Phylogeny of the mycorrhizal gourmet mushrooms "matsutake" based on nucleotide sequences of multiple genes and genetic elements},
year = {2012},
keywords = {ectomycorrhizal fungi, multilocus phylogeny, median-joining haplotype network},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycologia},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Tricholoma matsutake (S. Ito & S. Imai) Singer and its allied species, are referred to as ?matsutake? worldwide, and are the most economically important edible mushrooms in Japan. They are widely distributed in the northern hemisphere and establish a unique ectomycorrhizal relationship with conifer and broadleaf trees. To clarify relationships among T. matsutake and its allies, and to delimit phylogenetic species, we analysed multilocus datasets (ITS, megB1, tef, and gpd) using correctly identified samples. Phylogenetic analyses clearly identified four major groups; the ?matsutake? group, T. bakamatsutake, T. fulvocastaneum, and T. caligatum; the latter three species were outside the ?matsutake? group. The ?matsutake? group included four closely related but clearly distinct taxa (T. matsutake, T. anatolicum, Tricholoma sp. from Mexico, and T. magnivelare) from different geographical regions; these were considered to be distinct phylogenetic species.}
}
Citation for Study 12515
Citation title:
"Phylogeny of the mycorrhizal gourmet mushrooms "matsutake" based on nucleotide sequences of multiple genes and genetic elements".
Study name:
"Phylogeny of the mycorrhizal gourmet mushrooms "matsutake" based on nucleotide sequences of multiple genes and genetic elements".
This study is part of submission 12515
(Status: Published).
Citation
Ota Y., Yamanaka T., Murata H., & Neda H. 2012. Phylogeny of the mycorrhizal gourmet mushrooms "matsutake" based on nucleotide sequences of multiple genes and genetic elements. Mycologia, .
Authors
-
Ota Y.
-
Yamanaka T.
-
Murata H.
-
Neda H.
Abstract
Tricholoma matsutake (S. Ito & S. Imai) Singer and its allied species, are referred to as ?matsutake? worldwide, and are the most economically important edible mushrooms in Japan. They are widely distributed in the northern hemisphere and establish a unique ectomycorrhizal relationship with conifer and broadleaf trees. To clarify relationships among T. matsutake and its allies, and to delimit phylogenetic species, we analysed multilocus datasets (ITS, megB1, tef, and gpd) using correctly identified samples. Phylogenetic analyses clearly identified four major groups; the ?matsutake? group, T. bakamatsutake, T. fulvocastaneum, and T. caligatum; the latter three species were outside the ?matsutake? group. The ?matsutake? group included four closely related but clearly distinct taxa (T. matsutake, T. anatolicum, Tricholoma sp. from Mexico, and T. magnivelare) from different geographical regions; these were considered to be distinct phylogenetic species.
Keywords
ectomycorrhizal fungi, multilocus phylogeny, median-joining haplotype network
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S12515
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref20546,
author = {Yuko Ota and Takashi Yamanaka and Hitoshi Murata and Hitoshi neda},
title = {Phylogeny of the mycorrhizal gourmet mushrooms "matsutake" based on nucleotide sequences of multiple genes and genetic elements},
year = {2012},
keywords = {ectomycorrhizal fungi, multilocus phylogeny, median-joining haplotype network},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycologia},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Tricholoma matsutake (S. Ito & S. Imai) Singer and its allied species, are referred to as ?matsutake? worldwide, and are the most economically important edible mushrooms in Japan. They are widely distributed in the northern hemisphere and establish a unique ectomycorrhizal relationship with conifer and broadleaf trees. To clarify relationships among T. matsutake and its allies, and to delimit phylogenetic species, we analysed multilocus datasets (ITS, megB1, tef, and gpd) using correctly identified samples. Phylogenetic analyses clearly identified four major groups; the ?matsutake? group, T. bakamatsutake, T. fulvocastaneum, and T. caligatum; the latter three species were outside the ?matsutake? group. The ?matsutake? group included four closely related but clearly distinct taxa (T. matsutake, T. anatolicum, Tricholoma sp. from Mexico, and T. magnivelare) from different geographical regions; these were considered to be distinct phylogenetic species.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 20546
AU - Ota,Yuko
AU - Yamanaka,Takashi
AU - Murata,Hitoshi
AU - neda,Hitoshi
T1 - Phylogeny of the mycorrhizal gourmet mushrooms "matsutake" based on nucleotide sequences of multiple genes and genetic elements
PY - 2012
KW - ectomycorrhizal fungi
KW - multilocus phylogeny
KW - median-joining haplotype network
UR - http://dx.doi.org/
N2 - Tricholoma matsutake (S. Ito & S. Imai) Singer and its allied species, are referred to as ?matsutake? worldwide, and are the most economically important edible mushrooms in Japan. They are widely distributed in the northern hemisphere and establish a unique ectomycorrhizal relationship with conifer and broadleaf trees. To clarify relationships among T. matsutake and its allies, and to delimit phylogenetic species, we analysed multilocus datasets (ITS, megB1, tef, and gpd) using correctly identified samples. Phylogenetic analyses clearly identified four major groups; the ?matsutake? group, T. bakamatsutake, T. fulvocastaneum, and T. caligatum; the latter three species were outside the ?matsutake? group. The ?matsutake? group included four closely related but clearly distinct taxa (T. matsutake, T. anatolicum, Tricholoma sp. from Mexico, and T. magnivelare) from different geographical regions; these were considered to be distinct phylogenetic species.
L3 -
JF - Mycologia
VL -
IS -
ER -