@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref19025,
author = {Geir Hestmark and Jolanta Maria Miadlikowska and Frank Kauff and Emily Fraker and Katalin Molnar and Francois Lutzoni},
title = {Single origin and subsequent diversification of Central Andean endemic Umbilicaria species},
year = {2010},
keywords = {Neotropics, endemism, evolutionary radiation, apothecium types, reproductive strategies, lichen-forming Lecanoromycetes },
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycologia},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {We studied an Andean endemic group of species of the lichen-forming fungal genus Umbilicaria from the sub-alpine and low-alpine zone, with their biogeographic center in Bolivia and Peru. A number of species and varieties have been described from this element, but apparent instability in several morphological traits has made it difficult to precisely delimit taxa. Based on DNA sequences of nuclear ITS, LSU and mitochondrial SSU from extensive collections from Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru, we present here a molecular phylogenetic analysis of this Andean endemic element within the genus Umbilicaria. All analyses (MP, ML, and Bayesian) support a single origin for the entire endemic element, and a division into two major groups, characterized by different apothecium types: the Umbilicaria dichroa group and the U. calvescens group. The taxa U. krempelhuberi, U. peruviana and U. subcalvescens are nested within U. calvescens, and are treated as conspecific with the latter species. The endemic element shares a most recent common ancestor with the Umbilicaria vellea group, which has a world-wide distribution, and contains several asexually reproducing (sorediate) species. Independent reversals to sexual reproduction might explain the evolution of two different types of apothecia in this monophyletic endemic lineage. A number of cosmopolitan, mostly high-alpine, species of Umbilicaria also present in the central Andes are only remotely related to the endemic element, and do not exhibit speciation into endemics. Because the Andean endemic element completely dominates the Umbilicaria habitats of the low- and sub-alpine zones, we propose that the founder of the endemic element colonized the Andes at a time when the mountains had not yet reached their current elevation, while the high-alpine species arrived more recently.}
}
Taxa for Study 10614
Citation title:
"Single origin and subsequent diversification of Central Andean endemic Umbilicaria species".
Study name:
"Single origin and subsequent diversification of Central Andean endemic Umbilicaria species".
This study is part of submission 10604
(Status: Published).
Taxa