How to translate text using browser tools
1 October 2012 Phylogeny and Taxonomy of an Enigmatic Sterile Lichen
Brendan P. Hodkinson, James C. Lendemer
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Crustose, asexually reproducing taxa represent a large component of lichen biodiversity that is often overlooked and underestimated; as a result, remarkable potential remains for discovery of new species in this neglected, polyphyletic group. For this study, ITS and mtSSU rDNA sequences were analyzed in conjunction with chemical and anatomical data to understand the systematic placement of an enigmatic, sterile lichen. This species, despite references in the literature, and being known for over half a decade, has remained undescribed due to our inability to integrate it into a higher-level taxonomic framework using morphology alone. Here we demonstrate the utility of a systematic methodology that combines molecular and non-molecular characters to place and circumscribe species of asexually reproducing lichens that are typically sterile. Based on our analyses, the new species, Caloplaca reptans, shows phylogenetic and morphological affinities to a broad group of Caloplaca species with gray thalli, including the type species of the genus, C. cerina. This study highlights that the family Teloschistaceae is morphologically more diverse than previously understood, and contains elements that cannot easily be placed in known ‘species groups.’

© Copyright 2012 by the American Society of Plant Taxonomists
Brendan P. Hodkinson and James C. Lendemer "Phylogeny and Taxonomy of an Enigmatic Sterile Lichen," Systematic Botany 37(4), 835-844, (1 October 2012). https://doi.org/10.1600/036364412X656536
Published: 1 October 2012
KEYWORDS
Heterogeneous substitution rates
INAASE
inflated posterior probabilities
long-branch attraction
PICS-Ord
star-tree paradox
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission
Back to Top