| Literature DB >> 25944223 |
Ekaphan Kraichak1, Pradeep K Divakar2, Ana Crespo2, Steven D Leavitt3, Matthew P Nelsen4, Robert Lücking3, H Thorsten Lumbsch3.
Abstract
Renewed interests in macroevolutionary dynamics have led to the proliferation of studies on diversification processes in large taxonomic groups, such as angiosperms, mammals, and birds. However, such a study has yet to be conducted in lichenized fungi--an extremely successful and diverse group of fungi. Analysing the most comprehensive time-calibrated phylogenies with a new analytical method, we illustrated drastically different diversification dynamics between two hyper-diverse families of lichenized fungi, Graphidaceae and Parmeliaceae, which represent more than a fourth of the total species diversity of lichenized fungi. Despite adopting a similar nutrition mode and having a similar number of species, Graphidaceae exhibited a lower speciation rate, while Parmeliaceae showed a sharp increase in speciation rate that corresponded with the aridification during the Oligocene-Miocene transition, suggesting their adaptive radiation into a novel arid habitat.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25944223 PMCID: PMC4421861 DOI: 10.1038/srep10028
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Phylorate plots of lichenized fungal families Graphidaceae (a) and Parmeliaceae (b). The colours indicate relative speciation rate on each branch on the maximum clade credibility tree. Four panels on the right depict four most common rate shift configurations from the 95% credible shift set with the locations of rate shift indicated by red circles.
Figure 2Cohort analyses of lichenized fungal families Graphidaceae (a) and Parmeliaceae (b). The colours indicate a relative pairwise similarity between speciation rates of two tips across the tree (1 = most similar, 0 = most dissimilar). The letter codes on the right denote different “diversification regimes” in the family.
Figure 3Speciation rate through time plots of lichenized fungal families Graphidaceae (a) and Parmeliaceae (b) along with the estimates of global temperature anomalies from the past 180 million years ago (c) from two proxies: CO2 (i) and δ18O (ii). The rates of the two lineages with the highest speciation rates from each family were also plotted on the same scale.