@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref25205,
author = {Patrick R. Leacock and Jill Riddell and Andrew Wilson and Rui Zhang and Ning Chen and Gregory M Mueller},
title = {Cantharellus chicagoensis sp. nov. is confirmed by molecular and morphological analysis as a new yellow chanterelle in midwestern United States},
year = {2016},
keywords = {Cantharellales, Cantharellus cibarius, diversity, phylogeny, taxonomy},
doi = {10.3852/15-230},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycologia},
volume = {108},
number = {5},
pages = {765--772},
abstract = {Recent molecular systematic studies of Cantharellus cibarius sensu lato have revealed previously unknown species in different regions of North America. This study investigates yellow chanterelles in the Midwest using phylogenetic analysis of three DNA regions: nuc rDNA internal transcribed spacer 2 (ITS2) and 28S sequences and translation elongation factor 1a gene (EF1a). This analysis reveals a locally common taxon Cantharellus chicagoensis sp. nov. as distinct from sympatric species present in northeastern Illinois, northwestern Indiana and Wisconsin. This chanterelle features a pileus that often has a greenish yellow margin when immature, a squamulose disk when mature, a yellow spore print and the absence of a fragrant odor. Multiple Cantharellus specimens group with C. flavus and C. phasmatis, expanding their known range, and others with C. roseocanus. Our observations highlight the diversity of Cantharellus in midwestern USA and further document the need for additional systematic focus on the region?s fungi.}
}
Citation for Study 18405
Citation title:
"Cantharellus chicagoensis sp. nov. is confirmed by molecular and morphological analysis as a new yellow chanterelle in midwestern United States".
Study name:
"Cantharellus chicagoensis sp. nov. is confirmed by molecular and morphological analysis as a new yellow chanterelle in midwestern United States".
This study is part of submission 18405
(Status: Published).
Citation
Leacock P.R., Riddell J., Wilson A., Zhang R., Chen N., & Mueller G.M. 2016. Cantharellus chicagoensis sp. nov. is confirmed by molecular and morphological analysis as a new yellow chanterelle in midwestern United States. Mycologia, 108(5): 765-772.
Authors
-
Leacock P.R.
-
Riddell J.
-
Wilson A.
(submitter)
508-754-8531
-
Zhang R.
-
Chen N.
-
Mueller G.M.
Abstract
Recent molecular systematic studies of Cantharellus cibarius sensu lato have revealed previously unknown species in different regions of North America. This study investigates yellow chanterelles in the Midwest using phylogenetic analysis of three DNA regions: nuc rDNA internal transcribed spacer 2 (ITS2) and 28S sequences and translation elongation factor 1a gene (EF1a). This analysis reveals a locally common taxon Cantharellus chicagoensis sp. nov. as distinct from sympatric species present in northeastern Illinois, northwestern Indiana and Wisconsin. This chanterelle features a pileus that often has a greenish yellow margin when immature, a squamulose disk when mature, a yellow spore print and the absence of a fragrant odor. Multiple Cantharellus specimens group with C. flavus and C. phasmatis, expanding their known range, and others with C. roseocanus. Our observations highlight the diversity of Cantharellus in midwestern USA and further document the need for additional systematic focus on the region?s fungi.
Keywords
Cantharellales, Cantharellus cibarius, diversity, phylogeny, taxonomy
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S18405
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref25205,
author = {Patrick R. Leacock and Jill Riddell and Andrew Wilson and Rui Zhang and Ning Chen and Gregory M Mueller},
title = {Cantharellus chicagoensis sp. nov. is confirmed by molecular and morphological analysis as a new yellow chanterelle in midwestern United States},
year = {2016},
keywords = {Cantharellales, Cantharellus cibarius, diversity, phylogeny, taxonomy},
doi = {10.3852/15-230},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycologia},
volume = {108},
number = {5},
pages = {765--772},
abstract = {Recent molecular systematic studies of Cantharellus cibarius sensu lato have revealed previously unknown species in different regions of North America. This study investigates yellow chanterelles in the Midwest using phylogenetic analysis of three DNA regions: nuc rDNA internal transcribed spacer 2 (ITS2) and 28S sequences and translation elongation factor 1a gene (EF1a). This analysis reveals a locally common taxon Cantharellus chicagoensis sp. nov. as distinct from sympatric species present in northeastern Illinois, northwestern Indiana and Wisconsin. This chanterelle features a pileus that often has a greenish yellow margin when immature, a squamulose disk when mature, a yellow spore print and the absence of a fragrant odor. Multiple Cantharellus specimens group with C. flavus and C. phasmatis, expanding their known range, and others with C. roseocanus. Our observations highlight the diversity of Cantharellus in midwestern USA and further document the need for additional systematic focus on the region?s fungi.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 25205
AU - Leacock,Patrick R.
AU - Riddell,Jill
AU - Wilson,Andrew
AU - Zhang,Rui
AU - Chen,Ning
AU - Mueller,Gregory M
T1 - Cantharellus chicagoensis sp. nov. is confirmed by molecular and morphological analysis as a new yellow chanterelle in midwestern United States
PY - 2016
KW - Cantharellales
KW - Cantharellus cibarius
KW - diversity
KW - phylogeny
KW - taxonomy
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.3852/15-230
N2 - Recent molecular systematic studies of Cantharellus cibarius sensu lato have revealed previously unknown species in different regions of North America. This study investigates yellow chanterelles in the Midwest using phylogenetic analysis of three DNA regions: nuc rDNA internal transcribed spacer 2 (ITS2) and 28S sequences and translation elongation factor 1a gene (EF1a). This analysis reveals a locally common taxon Cantharellus chicagoensis sp. nov. as distinct from sympatric species present in northeastern Illinois, northwestern Indiana and Wisconsin. This chanterelle features a pileus that often has a greenish yellow margin when immature, a squamulose disk when mature, a yellow spore print and the absence of a fragrant odor. Multiple Cantharellus specimens group with C. flavus and C. phasmatis, expanding their known range, and others with C. roseocanus. Our observations highlight the diversity of Cantharellus in midwestern USA and further document the need for additional systematic focus on the region?s fungi.
L3 - 10.3852/15-230
JF - Mycologia
VL - 108
IS - 5
SP - 765
EP - 772
ER -