{"title":"透明丝瓜科和蜘蛛科的分类与系统。","authors":"T Kosonen, S Huhtinen, K Hansen","doi":"10.3767/persoonia.2021.46.02","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>The circumscription and composition of the <i>Hyaloscyphaceae</i> are controversial and based on poorly sampled or unsupported phylogenies. The generic limits within the hyaloscyphoid fungi are also very poorly understood. To address this issue, a robust five-gene Bayesian phylogeny (LSU, <i>RPB1</i>, <i>RPB2</i>, <i>TEF-1α</i>, mtSSU; 5521 bp) with a focus on the core group of <i>Hyaloscyphaceae</i> and <i>Arachnopezizaceae</i> is presented here, with comparative morphological and histochemical characters. A wide representative sampling of <i>Hyaloscypha</i> supports it as monophyletic and shows <i>H. aureliella</i> (subgenus <i>Eupezizella</i>) to be a strongly supported sister taxon. Reinforced by distinguishing morphological features, <i>Eupezizella</i> is here recognised as a separate genus, comprising <i>E. aureliella</i>, <i>E. britannica</i>, <i>E. roseoguttata</i> and <i>E. nipponica</i> (previously treated in <i>Hyaloscypha</i>). In a sister group to the <i>Hyaloscypha</i>-<i>Eupezizella</i> clade a new genus, <i>Mimicoscypha</i>, is created for three seldom collected and poorly understood species, <i>M. lacrimiformis</i>, <i>M. mimica</i> (<i>nom. nov.</i>) and <i>M. paludosa</i>, previously treated in <i>Phialina</i>, <i>Hyaloscypha</i> and <i>Eriopezia</i>, respectively. The <i>Arachnopezizaceae</i> is polyphyletic, because <i>Arachnoscypha</i> forms a monophyletic group with <i>Polydesmia pruinosa</i>, distant to <i>Arachnopeziza</i> and <i>Eriopezia</i>; in addition, <i>Arachnopeziza variepilosa</i> represents an early diverging lineage in <i>Hyaloscyphaceae</i> s.str. The hyphae originating from the base of the apothecia in <i>Arachnoscypha</i> are considered anchoring hyphae (vs a subiculum) and <i>Arachnoscypha</i> is excluded from <i>Arachnopezizaceae</i>. A new genus, <i>Resinoscypha</i>, is established to accommodate <i>Arachnopeziza variepilosa</i> and <i>A. monoseptata</i>, originally described in <i>Protounguicularia. Mimicoscypha</i> and <i>Resinoscypha</i> are distinguished among hyaloscyphoid fungi by long tapering multiseptate hairs that are not dextrinoid or glassy, in combination with ectal excipulum cells with deep amyloid nodules. Unique to <i>Resinoscypha</i> is cyanophilous resinous content in the hairs concentrated at the apex and septa. Small intensely amyloid nodules in the hairs are furthermore characteristic for <i>Resinoscypha</i> and <i>Eupezizella</i>. To elucidate species limits and diversity in <i>Arachnopeziza</i>, mainly from Northern Europe, we applied genealogical concordance phylogenetic species recognition (GCPSR) using analyses of individual datasets (ITS, LSU, <i>RPB1</i>, <i>RPB2</i>, <i>TEF-1α</i>) and comparative morphology. Eight species were identified as highly supported and reciprocally monophyletic. Four of these are newly discovered species, with two formally described here, viz. <i>A. estonica</i> and <i>A. ptilidiophila</i>. In addition, <i>Belonium sphagnisedum</i>, which completely lacks prominent hairs, is here combined in <i>Arachnopeziza</i>, widening the concept of the genus. Numerous publicly available sequences named <i>A. aurata</i> represent <i>A. delicatula</i> and the confusion between these two species is clarified. An additional four singletons are considered to be distinct species, because they were genetically divergent from their sisters. A highly supported five-gene phylogeny of <i>Arachnopezizaceae</i> identified four major clades in <i>Arachnopeziza</i>, with <i>Eriopezia</i> as a sister group. Two of the clades include species with a strong connection to bryophytes; the third clade includes species growing on bulky woody substrates and with pigmented exudates on the hairs; and the fourth clade species with hyaline exudates growing on both bryophytes and hardwood. A morphological account is given of the composition of <i>Hyaloscyphaceae</i> and <i>Arachnopezizaceae</i>, including new observations on vital and histochemical characters. <b>Citation</b>: Kosonen T, Huhtinen S, Hansen K. 2021. Taxonomy and systematics of Hyaloscyphaceae and Arachnopezizaceae. Persoonia 46: 26-62. https://doi.org/10.3767/persoonia.2021.46.02.</p>","PeriodicalId":20014,"journal":{"name":"Persoonia","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":9.5000,"publicationDate":"2021-06-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9311398/pdf/","citationCount":"6","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Taxonomy and systematics of <i>Hyaloscyphaceae</i> and <i>Arachnopezizaceae</i>.\",\"authors\":\"T Kosonen, S Huhtinen, K Hansen\",\"doi\":\"10.3767/persoonia.2021.46.02\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>The circumscription and composition of the <i>Hyaloscyphaceae</i> are controversial and based on poorly sampled or unsupported phylogenies. The generic limits within the hyaloscyphoid fungi are also very poorly understood. To address this issue, a robust five-gene Bayesian phylogeny (LSU, <i>RPB1</i>, <i>RPB2</i>, <i>TEF-1α</i>, mtSSU; 5521 bp) with a focus on the core group of <i>Hyaloscyphaceae</i> and <i>Arachnopezizaceae</i> is presented here, with comparative morphological and histochemical characters. A wide representative sampling of <i>Hyaloscypha</i> supports it as monophyletic and shows <i>H. aureliella</i> (subgenus <i>Eupezizella</i>) to be a strongly supported sister taxon. Reinforced by distinguishing morphological features, <i>Eupezizella</i> is here recognised as a separate genus, comprising <i>E. aureliella</i>, <i>E. britannica</i>, <i>E. roseoguttata</i> and <i>E. nipponica</i> (previously treated in <i>Hyaloscypha</i>). In a sister group to the <i>Hyaloscypha</i>-<i>Eupezizella</i> clade a new genus, <i>Mimicoscypha</i>, is created for three seldom collected and poorly understood species, <i>M. lacrimiformis</i>, <i>M. mimica</i> (<i>nom. nov.</i>) and <i>M. paludosa</i>, previously treated in <i>Phialina</i>, <i>Hyaloscypha</i> and <i>Eriopezia</i>, respectively. The <i>Arachnopezizaceae</i> is polyphyletic, because <i>Arachnoscypha</i> forms a monophyletic group with <i>Polydesmia pruinosa</i>, distant to <i>Arachnopeziza</i> and <i>Eriopezia</i>; in addition, <i>Arachnopeziza variepilosa</i> represents an early diverging lineage in <i>Hyaloscyphaceae</i> s.str. The hyphae originating from the base of the apothecia in <i>Arachnoscypha</i> are considered anchoring hyphae (vs a subiculum) and <i>Arachnoscypha</i> is excluded from <i>Arachnopezizaceae</i>. A new genus, <i>Resinoscypha</i>, is established to accommodate <i>Arachnopeziza variepilosa</i> and <i>A. monoseptata</i>, originally described in <i>Protounguicularia. Mimicoscypha</i> and <i>Resinoscypha</i> are distinguished among hyaloscyphoid fungi by long tapering multiseptate hairs that are not dextrinoid or glassy, in combination with ectal excipulum cells with deep amyloid nodules. Unique to <i>Resinoscypha</i> is cyanophilous resinous content in the hairs concentrated at the apex and septa. Small intensely amyloid nodules in the hairs are furthermore characteristic for <i>Resinoscypha</i> and <i>Eupezizella</i>. To elucidate species limits and diversity in <i>Arachnopeziza</i>, mainly from Northern Europe, we applied genealogical concordance phylogenetic species recognition (GCPSR) using analyses of individual datasets (ITS, LSU, <i>RPB1</i>, <i>RPB2</i>, <i>TEF-1α</i>) and comparative morphology. Eight species were identified as highly supported and reciprocally monophyletic. Four of these are newly discovered species, with two formally described here, viz. <i>A. estonica</i> and <i>A. ptilidiophila</i>. In addition, <i>Belonium sphagnisedum</i>, which completely lacks prominent hairs, is here combined in <i>Arachnopeziza</i>, widening the concept of the genus. Numerous publicly available sequences named <i>A. aurata</i> represent <i>A. delicatula</i> and the confusion between these two species is clarified. An additional four singletons are considered to be distinct species, because they were genetically divergent from their sisters. A highly supported five-gene phylogeny of <i>Arachnopezizaceae</i> identified four major clades in <i>Arachnopeziza</i>, with <i>Eriopezia</i> as a sister group. Two of the clades include species with a strong connection to bryophytes; the third clade includes species growing on bulky woody substrates and with pigmented exudates on the hairs; and the fourth clade species with hyaline exudates growing on both bryophytes and hardwood. A morphological account is given of the composition of <i>Hyaloscyphaceae</i> and <i>Arachnopezizaceae</i>, including new observations on vital and histochemical characters. <b>Citation</b>: Kosonen T, Huhtinen S, Hansen K. 2021. Taxonomy and systematics of Hyaloscyphaceae and Arachnopezizaceae. 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引用次数: 6
摘要
透明球科的界限和组成是有争议的,并且基于样本不足或不支持的系统发育。透明孢子真菌的属类界限也很不清楚。为了解决这一问题,一个强大的五基因贝叶斯系统发育(LSU, RPB1, RPB2, TEF-1α, mtSSU;5521 bp),重点介绍了Hyaloscyphaceae和Arachnopezizaceae的核心类群,并比较了形态学和组织化学特征。一个广泛的有代表性的透明丝菌样本支持它是单系的,并显示H. aureliella (Eupezizella亚属)是一个强有力的支持的姐妹分类单元。通过区分形态特征,Eupezizella在这里被认为是一个单独的属,包括E. aureliella, E. britannica, E. roseoguttata和E. nipponica(以前在Hyaloscypha中处理过)。在Hyaloscypha- eupezizella分支的姐妹类群中,为三个很少收集和了解较少的物种,M. lacrimiformis, M. mimica(命名于11月)和M. paludosa,创建了一个新的属,Mimicoscypha,之前分别在Phialina, Hyaloscypha和Eriopezia中进行了研究。蛛形纲是多系的,因为蛛形纲与多系蛛形纲形成一个单系群,与蛛形纲和角形纲相距较远;此外,变种蜘蛛(Arachnopeziza variepilosa)代表了透明丝藻科的一个早期分化谱系。蛛形纲中起源于棘突基部的菌丝被认为是锚定菌丝(相对于下托),蛛形纲被排除在蛛形纲之外。为了容纳Arachnopeziza variepilosa和A. monoseptata,一个新属Resinoscypha被建立。在透明状真菌中,小隐菌和树脂隐菌的特征是长而渐细的多隔毛,不是糊状或玻璃状,并伴有直肠外珠细胞深淀粉样结节。树脂隐菌的独特之处在于其毛中含有蓝色的树脂,集中在先端和中隔。此外,在树脂隐菌和Eupezizella中,头发上有小而强烈的淀粉样结节。为了阐明Arachnopeziza(主要来自北欧)的物种限制和多样性,我们利用单个数据集(ITS, LSU, RPB1, RPB2, TEF-1α)和比较形态学分析,采用谱系一致性系统发育物种识别(GCPSR)方法。8种被鉴定为高度支持和相互单系。其中四个是新发现的物种,其中两个在这里正式描述,即A. estonica和A. ptilidiophila。此外,完全没有突出毛发的Belonium sphagnisedum在这里被合并到Arachnopeziza中,扩大了该属的概念。许多公开的序列命名为A. aurata代表A. delicatula,澄清了这两个物种之间的混淆。另外四个单胎被认为是不同的物种,因为它们在基因上与姐妹不同。一个高度支持的五基因系统发育鉴定了蜘蛛科的四个主要分支,并将Eriopezia作为姊妹群。其中两个分支包括与苔藓植物有密切联系的物种;第三支包括生长在笨重的木质基质上,毛上有色素渗出物的物种;具有透明渗出物的第四枝种既生长在苔藓植物上,也生长在硬木上。介绍了透明丝瓜科和蜘蛛科植物的形态组成,并对其生命和组织化学特征进行了新的观察。引用本文:Kosonen T, Huhtinen S, Hansen K. 2021。透明丝瓜科和蜘蛛科的分类与系统。人46:26-62。https://doi.org/10.3767/persoonia.2021.46.02。
Taxonomy and systematics of Hyaloscyphaceae and Arachnopezizaceae.
The circumscription and composition of the Hyaloscyphaceae are controversial and based on poorly sampled or unsupported phylogenies. The generic limits within the hyaloscyphoid fungi are also very poorly understood. To address this issue, a robust five-gene Bayesian phylogeny (LSU, RPB1, RPB2, TEF-1α, mtSSU; 5521 bp) with a focus on the core group of Hyaloscyphaceae and Arachnopezizaceae is presented here, with comparative morphological and histochemical characters. A wide representative sampling of Hyaloscypha supports it as monophyletic and shows H. aureliella (subgenus Eupezizella) to be a strongly supported sister taxon. Reinforced by distinguishing morphological features, Eupezizella is here recognised as a separate genus, comprising E. aureliella, E. britannica, E. roseoguttata and E. nipponica (previously treated in Hyaloscypha). In a sister group to the Hyaloscypha-Eupezizella clade a new genus, Mimicoscypha, is created for three seldom collected and poorly understood species, M. lacrimiformis, M. mimica (nom. nov.) and M. paludosa, previously treated in Phialina, Hyaloscypha and Eriopezia, respectively. The Arachnopezizaceae is polyphyletic, because Arachnoscypha forms a monophyletic group with Polydesmia pruinosa, distant to Arachnopeziza and Eriopezia; in addition, Arachnopeziza variepilosa represents an early diverging lineage in Hyaloscyphaceae s.str. The hyphae originating from the base of the apothecia in Arachnoscypha are considered anchoring hyphae (vs a subiculum) and Arachnoscypha is excluded from Arachnopezizaceae. A new genus, Resinoscypha, is established to accommodate Arachnopeziza variepilosa and A. monoseptata, originally described in Protounguicularia. Mimicoscypha and Resinoscypha are distinguished among hyaloscyphoid fungi by long tapering multiseptate hairs that are not dextrinoid or glassy, in combination with ectal excipulum cells with deep amyloid nodules. Unique to Resinoscypha is cyanophilous resinous content in the hairs concentrated at the apex and septa. Small intensely amyloid nodules in the hairs are furthermore characteristic for Resinoscypha and Eupezizella. To elucidate species limits and diversity in Arachnopeziza, mainly from Northern Europe, we applied genealogical concordance phylogenetic species recognition (GCPSR) using analyses of individual datasets (ITS, LSU, RPB1, RPB2, TEF-1α) and comparative morphology. Eight species were identified as highly supported and reciprocally monophyletic. Four of these are newly discovered species, with two formally described here, viz. A. estonica and A. ptilidiophila. In addition, Belonium sphagnisedum, which completely lacks prominent hairs, is here combined in Arachnopeziza, widening the concept of the genus. Numerous publicly available sequences named A. aurata represent A. delicatula and the confusion between these two species is clarified. An additional four singletons are considered to be distinct species, because they were genetically divergent from their sisters. A highly supported five-gene phylogeny of Arachnopezizaceae identified four major clades in Arachnopeziza, with Eriopezia as a sister group. Two of the clades include species with a strong connection to bryophytes; the third clade includes species growing on bulky woody substrates and with pigmented exudates on the hairs; and the fourth clade species with hyaline exudates growing on both bryophytes and hardwood. A morphological account is given of the composition of Hyaloscyphaceae and Arachnopezizaceae, including new observations on vital and histochemical characters. Citation: Kosonen T, Huhtinen S, Hansen K. 2021. Taxonomy and systematics of Hyaloscyphaceae and Arachnopezizaceae. Persoonia 46: 26-62. https://doi.org/10.3767/persoonia.2021.46.02.
期刊介绍:
Persoonia aspires to publish papers focusing on the molecular systematics and evolution of fungi. Additionally, it seeks to advance fungal taxonomy by employing a polythetic approach to elucidate the genuine phylogeny and relationships within the kingdom Fungi. The journal is dedicated to disseminating high-quality papers that unravel both known and novel fungal taxa at the DNA level. Moreover, it endeavors to provide fresh insights into evolutionary processes and relationships. The scope of papers considered encompasses research articles, along with topical and book reviews.