@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref22031,
author = {Annemieke Verbeken and Dirk Stubbe and Kobeke Van de Putte and Ursula Eberhardt and Jorinde Nuytinck},
title = {Tales of the unexpected: angiocarpous representatives of the Russulaceae in tropical South East Asia},
year = {2013},
keywords = {Lactarius, hypogeous fungi, gasteroid fungi, morphology, phylogeny, Zelleromyces, Arcangeliella, Martellia},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Persoonia},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Six new sequestrate Lactarius species are proposed from tropical forests in South East Asia. Extensive macro- and microscopical descriptions and illustrations of the main anatomical features are provided. Similarities with other sequestrate Russulales and their phylogenetic relationships are discussed. The placement of the species within Lactarius and its subgenera is confirmed by a molecular phylogeny based on ITS, LSU and rpb2 markers. A species key of the new taxa, including five other known angiocarpous species from South East Asia reported to exude milk, is given. The occurrence of angiocarpous fungi in tropical areas is considered underestimated and driving evolutionary forces towards gasteromycetization are probably more diverse than generally assumed. The discovery of a large diversity of angiocarpous milkcaps on a rather local tropical scale was unexpected, and especially the fact that in Sri Lanka more angiocarpous than agaricoid Lactarius species are known now.}
}
Citation for Study 14274
Citation title:
"Tales of the unexpected: angiocarpous representatives of the Russulaceae in tropical South East Asia".
Study name:
"Tales of the unexpected: angiocarpous representatives of the Russulaceae in tropical South East Asia".
This study is part of submission 14274
(Status: Published).
Citation
Verbeken A., Stubbe D., Van de putte K., Eberhardt U., & Nuytinck J. 2013. Tales of the unexpected: angiocarpous representatives of the Russulaceae in tropical South East Asia. Persoonia, .
Authors
-
Verbeken A.
-
Stubbe D.
-
Van de putte K.
-
Eberhardt U.
-
Nuytinck J.
(submitter)
+31 715274737
Abstract
Six new sequestrate Lactarius species are proposed from tropical forests in South East Asia. Extensive macro- and microscopical descriptions and illustrations of the main anatomical features are provided. Similarities with other sequestrate Russulales and their phylogenetic relationships are discussed. The placement of the species within Lactarius and its subgenera is confirmed by a molecular phylogeny based on ITS, LSU and rpb2 markers. A species key of the new taxa, including five other known angiocarpous species from South East Asia reported to exude milk, is given. The occurrence of angiocarpous fungi in tropical areas is considered underestimated and driving evolutionary forces towards gasteromycetization are probably more diverse than generally assumed. The discovery of a large diversity of angiocarpous milkcaps on a rather local tropical scale was unexpected, and especially the fact that in Sri Lanka more angiocarpous than agaricoid Lactarius species are known now.
Keywords
Lactarius, hypogeous fungi, gasteroid fungi, morphology, phylogeny, Zelleromyces, Arcangeliella, Martellia
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S14274
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref22031,
author = {Annemieke Verbeken and Dirk Stubbe and Kobeke Van de Putte and Ursula Eberhardt and Jorinde Nuytinck},
title = {Tales of the unexpected: angiocarpous representatives of the Russulaceae in tropical South East Asia},
year = {2013},
keywords = {Lactarius, hypogeous fungi, gasteroid fungi, morphology, phylogeny, Zelleromyces, Arcangeliella, Martellia},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Persoonia},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Six new sequestrate Lactarius species are proposed from tropical forests in South East Asia. Extensive macro- and microscopical descriptions and illustrations of the main anatomical features are provided. Similarities with other sequestrate Russulales and their phylogenetic relationships are discussed. The placement of the species within Lactarius and its subgenera is confirmed by a molecular phylogeny based on ITS, LSU and rpb2 markers. A species key of the new taxa, including five other known angiocarpous species from South East Asia reported to exude milk, is given. The occurrence of angiocarpous fungi in tropical areas is considered underestimated and driving evolutionary forces towards gasteromycetization are probably more diverse than generally assumed. The discovery of a large diversity of angiocarpous milkcaps on a rather local tropical scale was unexpected, and especially the fact that in Sri Lanka more angiocarpous than agaricoid Lactarius species are known now.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 22031
AU - Verbeken,Annemieke
AU - Stubbe,Dirk
AU - Van de Putte,Kobeke
AU - Eberhardt,Ursula
AU - Nuytinck,Jorinde
T1 - Tales of the unexpected: angiocarpous representatives of the Russulaceae in tropical South East Asia
PY - 2013
KW - Lactarius
KW - hypogeous fungi
KW - gasteroid fungi
KW - morphology
KW - phylogeny
KW - Zelleromyces
KW - Arcangeliella
KW - Martellia
UR - http://dx.doi.org/
N2 - Six new sequestrate Lactarius species are proposed from tropical forests in South East Asia. Extensive macro- and microscopical descriptions and illustrations of the main anatomical features are provided. Similarities with other sequestrate Russulales and their phylogenetic relationships are discussed. The placement of the species within Lactarius and its subgenera is confirmed by a molecular phylogeny based on ITS, LSU and rpb2 markers. A species key of the new taxa, including five other known angiocarpous species from South East Asia reported to exude milk, is given. The occurrence of angiocarpous fungi in tropical areas is considered underestimated and driving evolutionary forces towards gasteromycetization are probably more diverse than generally assumed. The discovery of a large diversity of angiocarpous milkcaps on a rather local tropical scale was unexpected, and especially the fact that in Sri Lanka more angiocarpous than agaricoid Lactarius species are known now.
L3 -
JF - Persoonia
VL -
IS -
ER -