@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref15856,
author = {Kenji Hirata and Motoaki Kusaba and Izumi Chuma and Jun Osue and Hitoshi Nakayashiki and Shigeyuki Mayama and Yukio Tosa},
title = {Speciation in Pyricularia inferred from multilocus phylogenetic analysis},
year = {2007},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycological Research},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Pyricularia isolates from various host plants were subjected to a multilocus phylogenetic analysis based on rDNA-ITS, actin, _-tubulin, and calmodulin loci. A combined gene tree resolved seven groups with 100% bootstrap support, suggesting that they are monophyletic groups supported concordantly by all four loci. By incorporating biological and morphological species criteria, each of the seven groups was considered to be a current species. However, phylogenetic relationships among these species were unresolved in the single-gene trees and in the combined tree. Furthermore, the transition from concordance to conflict occurred more than once in the combined gene tree. They were interpreted by assuming that Pyricularia has evolved through repeating species radiation. The transition point other than the current species limit was considered to be the limit of the former species.}
}
Citation for Study 1844

Citation title:
"Speciation in Pyricularia inferred from multilocus phylogenetic analysis".

This study was previously identified under the legacy study ID S1819
(Status: Published).
Citation
Hirata K., Kusaba M., Chuma I., Osue J., Nakayashiki H., Mayama S., & Tosa Y. 2007. Speciation in Pyricularia inferred from multilocus phylogenetic analysis. Mycological Research, null.
Authors
-
Hirata K.
-
Kusaba M.
-
Chuma I.
-
Osue J.
-
Nakayashiki H.
-
Mayama S.
-
Tosa Y.
Abstract
Pyricularia isolates from various host plants were subjected to a multilocus phylogenetic analysis based on rDNA-ITS, actin, _-tubulin, and calmodulin loci. A combined gene tree resolved seven groups with 100% bootstrap support, suggesting that they are monophyletic groups supported concordantly by all four loci. By incorporating biological and morphological species criteria, each of the seven groups was considered to be a current species. However, phylogenetic relationships among these species were unresolved in the single-gene trees and in the combined tree. Furthermore, the transition from concordance to conflict occurred more than once in the combined gene tree. They were interpreted by assuming that Pyricularia has evolved through repeating species radiation. The transition point other than the current species limit was considered to be the limit of the former species.
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S1844
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref15856,
author = {Kenji Hirata and Motoaki Kusaba and Izumi Chuma and Jun Osue and Hitoshi Nakayashiki and Shigeyuki Mayama and Yukio Tosa},
title = {Speciation in Pyricularia inferred from multilocus phylogenetic analysis},
year = {2007},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycological Research},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Pyricularia isolates from various host plants were subjected to a multilocus phylogenetic analysis based on rDNA-ITS, actin, _-tubulin, and calmodulin loci. A combined gene tree resolved seven groups with 100% bootstrap support, suggesting that they are monophyletic groups supported concordantly by all four loci. By incorporating biological and morphological species criteria, each of the seven groups was considered to be a current species. However, phylogenetic relationships among these species were unresolved in the single-gene trees and in the combined tree. Furthermore, the transition from concordance to conflict occurred more than once in the combined gene tree. They were interpreted by assuming that Pyricularia has evolved through repeating species radiation. The transition point other than the current species limit was considered to be the limit of the former species.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 15856
AU - Hirata,Kenji
AU - Kusaba,Motoaki
AU - Chuma,Izumi
AU - Osue,Jun
AU - Nakayashiki,Hitoshi
AU - Mayama,Shigeyuki
AU - Tosa,Yukio
T1 - Speciation in Pyricularia inferred from multilocus phylogenetic analysis
PY - 2007
KW -
UR -
N2 - Pyricularia isolates from various host plants were subjected to a multilocus phylogenetic analysis based on rDNA-ITS, actin, _-tubulin, and calmodulin loci. A combined gene tree resolved seven groups with 100% bootstrap support, suggesting that they are monophyletic groups supported concordantly by all four loci. By incorporating biological and morphological species criteria, each of the seven groups was considered to be a current species. However, phylogenetic relationships among these species were unresolved in the single-gene trees and in the combined tree. Furthermore, the transition from concordance to conflict occurred more than once in the combined gene tree. They were interpreted by assuming that Pyricularia has evolved through repeating species radiation. The transition point other than the current species limit was considered to be the limit of the former species.
L3 -
JF - Mycological Research
VL -
IS -
ER -