Published December 18, 2012 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Using Phylogenetic and Coalescent Methods to Understand the Species Diversity in the Cladia aggregata Complex (Ascomycota, Lecanorales)

  • 1. Srinakharinwirot University
  • 2. Ramkhamhaeng University
  • 3. University of Chicago
  • 4. The Field Museum

Description

The Cladia aggregata complex is one of the phenotypically most variable groups in lichenized fungi, making species determination difficult and resulting in different classifications accepting between one to eight species. Multi-locus DNA sequence data provide an avenue to test species delimitation scenarios using genealogical and coalescent methods, employing gene and species trees. Here we tested species delimitation in the complex using molecular data of four loci (nuITS and IGS rDNA, protein-coding GAPDH and Mcm-7), including 474 newly generated sequences. Using a combination of ML and Bayesian gene tree topologies, species tree inferences, coalescent-based species delimitation, and examination of phenotypic variation we assessed the circumscription of lineages. We propose that results from our analyses support a 12 species delimitation scenario, suggesting that there is a high level of species diversity in the complex. Morphological and chemical characters often do not characterize lineages but show some degree of plasticity within at least some of the clades. However, clades can often be characterized by a combination of several phenotypical characters. In contrast to the amount of homoplasy in the morphological characters, the data set exhibits some geographical patterns with putative species having distribution patterns, such as austral, Australasian or being endemic to Australia, New Zealand or Tasmania.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0052245
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:10697

Funding

The Field Museum
Scholarship
Srinakharinwirot University
Graduate Fund of the Faculty of Science
National Research Council of Thailand

UChicago Information

Division(s)
The College
Department(s)
Biological Sciences