Phylogeny and evolution of morphological structures in a highly diverse lineage of fruiting-body-forming amoebae, order Trichiales (Myxomycetes, Amoebozoa)

[Display omitted] •Increasing taxa sampling revealed unexpected phylogenetic relationships.•The structures of the fruiting bodies follow intricate evolutionary patterns.•Transitions between character states occurred rather within- than among clades.•Ancestral state reconstructions question the homol...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular phylogenetics and evolution 2022-12, Vol.177, p.107609-107609, Article 107609
Hauptverfasser: García-Cunchillos, Iván, Zamora, Juan Carlos, Ryberg, Martin, Lado, Carlos
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •Increasing taxa sampling revealed unexpected phylogenetic relationships.•The structures of the fruiting bodies follow intricate evolutionary patterns.•Transitions between character states occurred rather within- than among clades.•Ancestral state reconstructions question the homology of some traits. Early phylogenetic studies refuted most previous assumptions concerning the evolution of the morphological traits in the fruiting bodies of the order Trichiales and did not detect discernible evolutionary patterns, yet they were based on a limited number of species. We infer a new Trichiales phylogeny based on three independently inherited genetic regions (nuclear and mitochondrial), with a fair taxonomic sampling encompassing its broad diversity. Besides, we study the evolutionary history of some key morphological characters. According to the new phylogeny, most fruiting body traits in Trichiales systematics do not represent exclusive synapomorphies or autapomorphies for most monophyletic groups. Instead, the evolution of the features derived from the peridium, stalk, capillitium, and spores showed intricate patterns, and character state transitions occurred rather within- than between clades. Thus, we should consider other evolutionary scenarios instead of assuming the homology of some characters. According to these results, we propose a new classification of Trichiales, including the creation of a new genus, Gulielmina, the resurrection of the family Dictydiaethaliaceae and the genus Ophiotheca, and the proposal of 13 new combinations for species of the genera Arcyria (1), Hemitrichia (2), Ophiotheca (2), Oligonema (4), Gulielmina (3), and Perichaena (1).
ISSN:1055-7903
1095-9513
1095-9513
DOI:10.1016/j.ympev.2022.107609