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Circumboreal lichen diversification

Circumboreal lichen diversification

Helmut Mayrhofer (ORCID: )
  • Grant DOI 10.55776/P21052
  • Funding program Principal Investigator Projects
  • Status ended
  • Start September 1, 2008
  • End October 31, 2011
  • Funding amount € 163,338
  • Project website

Disciplines

Biology (100%)

Keywords

    BIODIVERSITY, PHYLOGEOGRAPHY, LICHENS, POPULATION GENETICS, BIOGEOGRAPHY, CIRCUMBOREAL

Abstract Final report

Lichens are one of the most important groups of organisms for monitoring environmental change, yet little is known about their worldwide diversity patterns. In higher plants, by contrast, there are well known patterns of Tertiary diversification and range fragmentation and Pleistocene extinctions and range shifts that have resulted in the vegetation patterns and world diversity hotspots we know today. It might be assumed that tree-dwelling lichen species follow similar distribution patterns, but the evidence is that this is not always the case. In particular, we note that while there are many lichen species that occur in East Asia and eastern North America (in agreement with many plants), there are also many species that occur in western North America and western Europe. The latter distribution is rare in plants at upper latitudes, and conspicuously at odds with the distribution of the trees on which epiphytic lichens grow. Circumboreal species are often treated as a distinct distributional type because they are found in all four regions, but it is possible that they conceal similar patterns of diversification in their DNA. We propose examining genetic structure within a model species of the boreal forest, Mycoblastus sanguinarius, in four different parts of its range: East Asia, western and eastern North America, and Europe. Specifically we will examine whether relationship patterns are congruent with the `East-East, West-West` distribution types of many lichen species and to what extent its modern distribution and genetic diversity centres diverge from those of its common substrate trees. The results will be an important contribution to understanding diversification patterns and gene flow in a representative species.

Lichens are one of the most important groups of organisms for monitoring environmental change, yet little is known about their worldwide diversity patterns. In higher plants, by contrast, there are well known patterns of Tertiary diversification and range fragmentation and Pleistocene extinctions and range shifts that have resulted in the vegetation patterns and world diversity hotspots we know today. It might be assumed that tree-dwelling lichen species follow similar distribution patterns, but the evidence is that this is not always the case. In particular, we note that while there are many lichen species that occur in East Asia and eastern North America (in agreement with many plants), there are also many species that occur in western North America and western Europe. The latter distribution is rare in plants at upper latitudes, and conspicuously at odds with the distribution of the trees on which epiphytic lichens grow. Circumboreal species are often treated as a distinct distributional type because they are found in all four regions, but it is possible that they conceal similar patterns of diversification in their DNA. We propose examining genetic structure within a model species of the boreal forest, Mycoblastus sanguinarius, in four different parts of its range: East Asia, western and eastern North America, and Europe. Specifically we will examine whether relationship patterns are congruent with the "East-East, West-West" distribution types of many lichen species and to what extent its modern distribution and genetic diversity centres diverge from those of its common substrate trees. The results will be an important contribution to understanding diversification patterns and gene flow in a representative species.

Research institution(s)
  • Universität Graz - 100%
International project participants
  • Trevor Goward, University of British Columbia - Canada
  • Christian Printzen, Senckenberg Forschungsinstitute und Naturmuseen (SFN) - Germany
  • Ken Sato, Hokkai-Gakuen University - Japan
  • Hiroyuki Kashiwadani, The National Science Museum Tokyo - Japan
  • Tor Tonsberg, University of Bergen - Norway
  • Lidia Yakovchenko, Russian Academy of Sciences - Russia
  • Stefan Ekman, Uppsala University - Sweden
  • Bruce Mccune, Oregon State University - USA
  • Thorsten Lumbsch, The Field Museum - USA
  • Douglas E. Soltis, University of Florida - USA

Research Output

  • 359 Citations
  • 11 Publications
Publications
  • 2012
    Title Expanded taxon sampling disentangles evolutionary relationships and reveals a new family in Peltigerales (Lecanoromycetidae, Ascomycota)
    DOI 10.1007/s13225-012-0206-5
    Type Journal Article
    Author Spribille T
    Journal Fungal Diversity
    Pages 171-184
  • 2012
    Title Further Contributions to the Genus Rinodina (Physciaceae, Lecanoromycetidae): Two Species New to Science and a New Record for the Canadian High Arctic
    DOI 10.13158/heia.25.2.2010.125
    Type Journal Article
    Author Sheard J
    Journal Herzogia
    Pages 125-143
  • 2012
    Title Multilocus phylogeny of the lichen-forming fungal genus Melanohalea (Parmeliaceae, Ascomycota): Insights on diversity, distributions, and a comparison of species tree and concatenated topologies
    DOI 10.1016/j.ympev.2012.09.013
    Type Journal Article
    Author Leavitt S
    Journal Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
    Pages 138-152
  • 2011
    Title Notes on Rinodina excrescens in the Russian Far East (Physciaceae, Lichenized Ascomycota)
    DOI 10.13158/heia.24.1.2011.59
    Type Journal Article
    Author Galanina I
    Journal Herzogia
    Pages 59-64
  • 2011
    Title A phylogenetic analysis of the boreal lichen Mycoblastus sanguinarius (Mycoblastaceae, lichenized Ascomycota) reveals cryptic clades correlated with fatty acid profiles
    DOI 10.1016/j.ympev.2011.03.021
    Type Journal Article
    Author Spribille T
    Journal Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
    Pages 603-614
    Link Publication
  • 2010
    Title Hypogymnia recurva and Hypogymnia wilfiana spp. nov., two new lichens from western North AmericaThis paper is one of a selection of papers published as part of the special Schofield Gedenkschrift.
    DOI 10.1139/b10-028
    Type Journal Article
    Author Goward T
    Journal Botany
    Pages 345-351
  • 2010
    Title Lichens and lichenicolous fungi of the Klondike Gold Rush National Historic Park, Alaska, in a global biodiversity context
    DOI 10.1639/0007-2745-113.3.439
    Type Journal Article
    Author Spribille T
    Journal The Bryologist
    Pages 439-515
  • 2017
    Title Pseudocyphellaria crocata (Ascomycota: Lobariaceae) in the Americas is revealed to be thirteen species, and none of them is P. crocata
    DOI 10.1639/0007-2745-120.4.14
    Type Journal Article
    Author Lcking R
    Journal The Bryologist
    Pages 441-500
  • 2011
    Title Molecular support for the recognition of the Mycoblastus fucatus group as the new genus Violella (Tephromelataceae, Lecanorales)
    DOI 10.1017/s0024282911000478
    Type Journal Article
    Author Spribille T
    Journal The Lichenologist
    Pages 445-466
    Link Publication
  • 2011
    Title Convergent evolution of a symbiotic duet: The case of the lichen genus Polychidium (Peltigerales, Ascomycota)
    DOI 10.3732/ajb.1100046
    Type Journal Article
    Author Muggia L
    Journal American Journal of Botany
    Pages 1647-1656
  • 2013
    Title Taxonomy of the genus Myrionora, with a second species from South America
    DOI 10.1017/s0024282912000692
    Type Journal Article
    Author Palice Z
    Journal The Lichenologist
    Pages 159-167

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