Global biogeography of the ectomycorrhizal /sebacina lineage (Fungi,Sebacinales) as revealed from comparative phylogenetic analyses |
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Authors: | Leho Tedersoo Mohammad Bahram Martin Ryberg Eveli Otsing Urmas Kõljalg Kessy Abarenkov |
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Affiliation: | 1. Natural History Museum of Tartu University, , Tartu, 50411 Estonia;2. Institute of Ecology and Earth Sciences, University of Tartu, , Tartu, 50411 Estonia;3. Department of Organismal Biology, Systematic Biology, Uppsala University, , Uppsala, 75236 Sweden |
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Abstract: | Compared with plants and animals, large‐scale biogeographic patterns of microbes including fungi are poorly understood. By the use of a comparative phylogenetic approach and ancestral state reconstructions, we addressed the global biogeography, rate of evolution and evolutionary origin of the widely distributed ectomycorrhizal (EcM) /sebacina lineage that forms a large proportion of the Sebacinales order. We downloaded all publicly available internal transcribed spacer (ITS) sequences and metadata and supplemented sequence information from three genes to construct dated phylogenies and test biogeographic hypotheses. The /sebacina lineage evolved 45–57 Myr ago that groups it with relatively young EcM taxa in other studies. The most parsimonious origin for /sebacina is inferred to be North American temperate coniferous forests. Among biogeographic traits, region and biome exhibited stronger phylogenetic signal than host family. Consistent with the resource availability (environmental energy) hypothesis, the ITS region is evolving at a faster rate in tropical than nontropical regions. Most biogeographic regions exhibited substantial phylogenetic clustering suggesting a strong impact of dispersal limitation over a large geographic scale. In northern Holarctic regions, however, phylogenetic distances and phylogenetic grouping of isolates indicate multiple recent dispersal events. |
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Keywords: | ancestral state reconstruction Basidiomycota biogeographic regions ectomycorrhizal symbiosis molecular clock phylogenetic conservatism rate of evolution |
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