Molecular data show that Bryoria fremontii and B. tortuosa (Parmeliaceae) are conspecific

Saara Velmala, Leena Myllys, Pekka Halonen, Trevor Goward, Teuvo Ahti

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Sammanfattning

Bryoria fremontii and B. tortuosa are the only species in the lichenized ascomycete genus Bryoria known to contain the pulvinic acid derivative vulpinic acid. In B. fremontii this yellow pigment is restricted to the soralia and apothecia, while in B. tortuosa it can occur throughout the thallus. The actual amount of vulpinic acid produced by B. tortuosa is rather variable, however, with intermediate specimens bearing both white and yellow pseudocyphellae. We studied the relationship between the two species with parsimony analysis using four DNA regions: 1) the internal transcribed spacers of the nuclear rDNA including the 5.8S region (ITS), 2) partial sequences from the intergenic spacer of the nuclear rDNA (IGS), 3) partial sequences from the small subunit of the mitochondrial rDNA (mtSSU), and 4) partial sequences from the protein-coding glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase gene (GAPDH). Our phylogenetic analysis revealed that B. fremontii and B. tortuosa must be regarded as conspecific, but allowing for some genetic differentiation between European and North American populations. Bryoria tortuosa is therefore synonymized with B. fremontii.
Originalspråkengelska
TidskriftLichenologist
Volym41
Nummer3
Sidor (från-till)231-242
Antal sidor12
ISSN0024-2829
DOI
StatusPublicerad - 2009
MoE-publikationstypA1 Tidskriftsartikel-refererad

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