Lepidostromatales
Lepidostromatales | |
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Lepidostroma vilgalysii Hodkinson | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Fungi |
Division: | Basidiomycota |
Class: | Agaricomycetes |
Order: | Lepidostromatales Hodkinson & Lücking (2013) |
Family: | Lepidostromataceae Ertz, Eb. Fischer, Killmann, Sérus. & Lawrey |
Genera | |
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Lepidostromatales is an order of fungi in the class Agaricomycetes. It is the only known order of basidiomycete fungi composed entirely of lichenized members. Morphologically, the fruiting bodies of all species are clavarioid. Six species are known, five of which were described within the span of 2007-2013. Due to its morphological similarity to the genus Multiclavula, its isolated phylogenetic position (distinct from all other orders based on molecular data) was not understood until quite recently. The photobionts that have been found in association with members of this group are not known to associate with any other types of lichenized fungi.[1]
Taxonomy
Members of Lepidostromatales closely resemble species of Multiclavula because these groups share a combination of clavarioid fruiting bodies and lichenized thalli. The first species described in the order was originally described in the genus Clavaria due to the clavarioid fungal fruiting body, and was later transferred to Multiclavula (Cantharellales) due to the lichenized thallus.[2][3] The group was first recognized as distinct on account of the small squamules (scale-like structures) that make up the thallus, and the genus Lepidostroma was created as a result.[4] With the addition of two more squamulose species discovered in tropical Africa, this separation was not accepted and Multiclavula was again emended to include species with squamulose thalli.[5] However, molecular phylogenetic analyses eventually confirmed Lepidostroma as a distinct lineage, Lepidostromataceae, unrelated to Multiclavula.[6] The recent discovery of three further species (for a total of six species),[1][7][8] created an opportunity for more in-depth phylogenetic research, which confirmed the isolation of the family from all described orders. As a result, the group was raised to the rank of order (Lepidostromatales).[1]
Although the separation of this group from Multiclavula was originally based on thallus type, further research has demonstrated that members of the group actually have three distinct thallus types, one of which ('crustose-granulose') matches up with Multiclavula.[1][8] However, the photobiont of Lepidostromatales is chlorococcoid instead of coccomyxoid (which is the type found in Multiclavula),[8][9][10] making the photobiont-type a reasonable diagnostic feature for the group. The three thallus types correlate with the current division of the group into three genera.
Habitat and distribution
All known members of the order are lichenized and grow on soil in tropical regions of Africa and the Americas.
References
- 1 2 3 4 Hodkinson, Brendan P.; Moncada, Bibiana; Lücking, Robert (January 2014). "Lepidostromatales, a new order of lichenized fungi (Basidiomycota, Agaricomycetes), with two new genera, Ertzia and Sulzbacheromyces, and one new species, Lepidostroma winklerianum". Fungal Diversity. 64 (1): 165–179. doi:10.1007/s13225-013-0267-0.
- ↑ Petersen RH. (1967). "Notes on clavarioid fungi. VII. Redefinition of the Clavaria vernalis-C. mucida complex". Am. Midl. Nat. 77: 205–221.
- ↑ Oberwinkler F. (1970). "Die Gattungen der Basidiolichenen". Vortr Gesamtgeb Bot. 4: 139–169.
- ↑ Mägdefrau K, Winkler S (1967). "Lepidostroma terricolens n. g. n. sp., eine Basidiolichene der Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta (Kolumbien)". Mitteil Inst Colombo-Alemán Invest Cient. 1: 11–17.
- ↑ Fischer E, Ertz D, Killmann D, Sérusiaux E (2007). "Two new species of Multiclavula (lichenized basidiomycetes) from savanna soils in Rwanda (East Africa)". Bot J Linn Soc. 155: 457–465. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8339.2007.00717.x.
- ↑ Ertz D, Lawrey JD, Sikaroodi M, Gillevet PM, Fischer E, Killmann D, Sérusiaux E (2008). "A new lineage of lichenized basidiomycetes inferred from a two-gene phylogeny: The Lepidostromataceae with three species from the tropics". Am J Bot. 95: 1548–1556. doi:10.3732/ajb.0800232.
- ↑ Hodkinson BP, Uehling JK, Smith ME (2012). "Lepidostroma vilgalysii, a new basidiolichen from the new world". Mycological Progress. 11: 827–833. doi:10.1007/s11557-011-0800-z.
- 1 2 3 Sulzbacher MA, Baseia IG, Lücking R, Parnmen S, Moncada B (2012). "Unexpected discovery of a novel basidiolichen in the threatened Caatinga biome of northeastern Brazil". Bryologist. 115: 601–609. doi:10.1639/0007-2745-115.4.601.
- ↑ Oberwinkler F. (1984). "Fungus-alga interactions in Basidiolichens". Beih Nova Hedwigia. 79: 739–774.
- ↑ Oberwinkler F. (2012). Basidiolichens. In: Hock B. (ed.) The Mycota, vol IX, Fungal associations. New York: Springer. pp. 341–362.