4.0 Article

A new perspective on the macrolichen genus Platismatia (Parmeliaceae, Ascomycota) based on molecular and phenotypic data

Journal

BRYOLOGIST
Volume 126, Issue 1, Pages 1-18

Publisher

AMER BRYOLOGICAL LICHENOLOGICAL SOC INC
DOI: 10.1639/0007-2745-126.1.001

Keywords

Asexual reproduction; biodiversity; biogeography; Parmeliaceae; species pairs

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Platismatia lichens are common and widespread, but there have been limited molecular phylogenetic studies on them. This study presents an expanded phylogeny of Platismatia based on newly generated ITS sequences. The results confirm the distinction between P. wheeleri and the widespread P. glauca. The study also suggests that Platismatia could be a useful model for future research on reproductive mode, biogeography, and speciation in lichens.
Lichens in the genus Platismatia are common, widespread and were some of the first to be studied by Western taxonomists. However, few molecular phylogenetic studies of Platismatia have been published to date. We present an expanded phylogeny of Platismatia inferred from 60 newly generated ITS sequences and 28 existing publicly available sequences. The new phylogeny confirms the delimitation of P. wheeleri as monophyletic and distinct from the widespread P. glauca, the latter of which was recovered as two separate, highly supported clades, that do not appear to differ in phenotype or biogeography. The western North American endemics P. herrei and P. stenophylla were not recovered as reciprocally monophyletic and may be an example of recent speciation similar to that also hypothesized for Alectoria in the same region. Ancestral state reconstructions of reproductive modes (dominant asexual vs. sexual reproduction; asexual propagule type) suggest that sexual species like P. tuckermanii can evolve from primarily asexual ancestors. Evaluation of species distributions suggests that reproductive mode may be related to range size. These data suggest that Platismatia could serve as a model for future studies on reproductive mode, biogeography and speciation in lichens.

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