Phylogenetic study documents different ...
Document type :
Article dans une revue scientifique: Article original
PMID :
Permalink :
Title :
Phylogenetic study documents different speciation mechanisms within the russula globispora lineage in boreal and arctic environments of the northern hemisphere
Author(s) :
Caboň, Miroslav [Auteur]
Slovak Academy of Sciences [SAS]
Li, Guo-Jie [Auteur]
Chinese Academy of Sciences [Beijing] [CAS]
Saba, Malka [Auteur]
University of the Punjab
Harvard University
Quaid-i-Azam University [QAU]
Kolařík, Miroslav [Auteur]
Institute of Microbiology of the Czech Academy of Sciences [Prague, Czech Republic] [MBU / CAS]
Jančovičová, Soňa [Auteur]
Comenius University in Bratislava
Khalid, Abdul Nasir [Auteur]
University of the Punjab
Moreau, Pierre-Arthur [Auteur]
IMPact de l'Environnement Chimique sur la Santé humaine (IMPECS) - EA 4483
Wen, Hua-An [Auteur]
Chinese Academy of Sciences [Beijing] [CAS]
Pfister, Donald H. [Auteur]
Harvard University
Adamčík, Slavomír [Auteur]
Slovak Academy of Sciences [SAS]
Slovak Academy of Sciences [SAS]
Li, Guo-Jie [Auteur]
Chinese Academy of Sciences [Beijing] [CAS]
Saba, Malka [Auteur]
University of the Punjab
Harvard University
Quaid-i-Azam University [QAU]
Kolařík, Miroslav [Auteur]
Institute of Microbiology of the Czech Academy of Sciences [Prague, Czech Republic] [MBU / CAS]
Jančovičová, Soňa [Auteur]
Comenius University in Bratislava
Khalid, Abdul Nasir [Auteur]
University of the Punjab
Moreau, Pierre-Arthur [Auteur]
IMPact de l'Environnement Chimique sur la Santé humaine (IMPECS) - EA 4483
Wen, Hua-An [Auteur]
Chinese Academy of Sciences [Beijing] [CAS]
Pfister, Donald H. [Auteur]
Harvard University
Adamčík, Slavomír [Auteur]
Slovak Academy of Sciences [SAS]
Journal title :
IMA Fungus
Volume number :
10
Pages :
5
Publisher :
Springer Nature
Publication date :
2019-06-07
ISSN :
2210-6340
Keyword(s) :
Ectomycorrhizal fungi
Biogeography
Climate
Disjunction
Evolutionary drivers
New taxa
Biogeography
Climate
Disjunction
Evolutionary drivers
New taxa
HAL domain(s) :
Sciences du Vivant [q-bio]
English abstract : [en]
The Russula globispora lineage is a morphologically and phylogenetically well-defined group of ectomycorrhizal fungi occurring in various climatic areas. In this study we performed a multi-locus phylogenetic study based ...
Show more >The Russula globispora lineage is a morphologically and phylogenetically well-defined group of ectomycorrhizal fungi occurring in various climatic areas. In this study we performed a multi-locus phylogenetic study based on collections from boreal, alpine and arctic habitats of Europe and Western North America, subalpine collections from the southeast Himalayas and collections from subtropical coniferous forests of Pakistan. European and North American collections are nearly identical and probably represent a single species named R. dryadicola distributed from the Alps to the Rocky Mountains. Collections from the southeast Himalayas belong to two distinct species: R. abbottabadensis sp. nov. from subtropical monodominant forests of Pinus roxburghii and R. tengii sp. nov. from subalpine mixed forests of Abies and Betula. The results suggest that speciation in this group is driven by a climate disjunction and adaptation rather than a host switch and geographical distance.Show less >
Show more >The Russula globispora lineage is a morphologically and phylogenetically well-defined group of ectomycorrhizal fungi occurring in various climatic areas. In this study we performed a multi-locus phylogenetic study based on collections from boreal, alpine and arctic habitats of Europe and Western North America, subalpine collections from the southeast Himalayas and collections from subtropical coniferous forests of Pakistan. European and North American collections are nearly identical and probably represent a single species named R. dryadicola distributed from the Alps to the Rocky Mountains. Collections from the southeast Himalayas belong to two distinct species: R. abbottabadensis sp. nov. from subtropical monodominant forests of Pinus roxburghii and R. tengii sp. nov. from subalpine mixed forests of Abies and Betula. The results suggest that speciation in this group is driven by a climate disjunction and adaptation rather than a host switch and geographical distance.Show less >
Language :
Anglais
Audience :
Internationale
Popular science :
Non
Administrative institution(s) :
IMT Lille Douai
Institut Catholique Lille
Univ. Artois
Université de Lille
Institut Catholique Lille
Univ. Artois
Université de Lille
Collections :
Submission date :
2022-02-02T10:23:54Z
2024-02-21T12:00:03Z
2024-02-21T12:00:03Z
Files
- Cabon et al.pdf
- Version éditeur
- Open access
- Access the document