Search About RLL About Mattick About Supplement Add to Supplement PDF file providers Help

Full record view

Pino-Bodas, R./ Stenroos, S. 2021[2020]: Global biodiversity patterns of the photobionts associated with the genus Cladonia (Lecanorales, Ascomycota). - Microbial Ecology 82: 173-187. [RLL List # 263 / Rec.# 42487]
Abstract: The diversity of lichen photobionts is not fully known. We studied here the diversity of the photobionts associated with Cladonia, a sub-cosmopolitan genus ecologically important, whose photobionts belong to the green algae genus Asterochloris. The genetic diversity of Asterochloris was screened by using the ITS rDNA and actin type I regions in 223 specimens and 135 species of Cladonia collected all over the world. These data, added to those available in GenBank, were compiled in a dataset of altogether 545 Asterochloris sequences occurring in 172 species of Cladonia. A high diversity of Asterochloris associated with Cladonia was found. The commonest photobiont lineages associated with this genus are A. glomerata, A. italiana, and A. mediterranea. Analyses of partitioned variation were carried out in order to elucidate the relative influence on the photobiont genetic variation of the following factors: mycobiont identity, geographic distribution, climate, and mycobiont phylogeny. The mycobiont identity and climate were found to be the main drivers for the genetic variation of Asterochloris. The geographical distribution of the different Asterochloris lineages was described. Some lineages showed a clear dominance in one or several climatic regions. In addition, the specificity and the selectivity were studied for 18 species of Cladonia. Potentially specialist and generalist species of Cladonia were identified. A correlation was found between the sexual reproduction frequency of the host and the frequency of certain Asterochloris OTUs. Some Asterochloris lineages co-occur with higher frequency than randomly expected in the Cladonia species.
– doi:10.1007/s00248-020-01633-3

URL: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs00248-020-01633-3

[Email correction]


Upload PDF file to the RLL web site

If you have a PDF file of this RLL/Mattic record, and there are no copyright problems involved, you may upload the file to the RLL/Mattick site. The PDF file will be automatically linked to the paper, and available for download by everyone. Only one PDF file can be linked to a paper, any previous link will be lost.

PDF file::
NB! Legal characters: a-z, A-Z, 0-9, hyphen, underscore, dot (i.e. no diacritics, ampersand, space, etc.).

  


Upload URL to PDF file or web site

Alternatively, you can link this RLL/Mattick record to a PDF file or web page placed somewhere else on the web. Again, only a single link can exist for each record; any previous link will be lost.

Copy and paste the URL you wish to link to this record: