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Abstract PremiseThe agaricomycete order Cantharellales contains approximately 1000 species of fungi characterized by diverse morphological forms, ecological guilds, and nutritional modes. Examples include coralloid lichens that form symbioses with unicellular green algae, bulbil‐forming lichenicolous species, corticioid free‐living fungi that degrade dead sources of organic carbon, pathogens that cause plant disease, orchid root endosymbionts, and ectomycorrhizal fungi including popular edible mushrooms. However, evolutionary relationships in the Cantharellales remain poorly understood due to conflicting estimates based on ribosomal DNA loci. MethodsWe constructed a five‐gene phylogeny of the Cantharellales using data from 301 specimens to evaluate family‐level relationships. We used penalized likelihood to estimate divergence times and ancestral state reconstruction to test the hypothesis of multiple independent origins of biotrophic ecologies in the order and whether those transitions are younger than the divergence times of associated plant or lichen hosts. ResultsFour monophyletic families were recovered with strong support: Botryobasidiaceae, Ceratobasidiaceae, Hydnaceae s.l., and Tulasnellaceae, with Hydnaceae containing the greatest species richness and morphological diversity. Our results suggest the Cantharellales diverged during the Carboniferous period with subsequent diversification following the Permian‐Triassic extinction. Ancestral state reconstruction supports a saprotrophic most recent common ancestor with at least three transitions to an ectomycorrhizal ecology, multiple transitions to a lichenicolous habit with one or more subsequent transitions to mutualistic nutritional modes, four transitions to an orchid mycorrhizal ecology, and two transitions to a lichenized lifestyle. ConclusionsThis study represents the first comprehensive examination of the evolution of form and function across this ecologically and morphologically diverse order of fungi.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available June 1, 2026
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Lichens collected worldwide for centuries have resulted in millions of specimens deposited in herbaria that offer the potential to assess species boundaries, phenotypic diversification, ecology, and distribution. The application of molecular approaches to historical collections has been limited due to DNA fragmentation, but high-throughput sequencing offers an opportunity to overcome this barrier. Here, we combined a large dataset of ITS sequences from recently collected material and historical collections, obtained through Sanger, 454, or Illumina Sequencing, to test the performance of ITS barcoding in two genera of lichenized Basidiomycota: Cora and Corella. We attempted to generate new sequence data for 62 fresh specimens (from 2016) and 274 historical collections (collected between 1888 and 1998), for a final dataset of 1325 sequences. We compared various quantitative approaches to delimit species (GMYC, bPTP, ASAP, ABGD) and tested the resolution and accuracy of the ITS fungal barcoding marker by comparison with a six-marker dataset. Finally, we quantitatively compared phylogenetic and phenotypic species delimitation for 87 selected Cora species that have been formally described. Our HTS approach successfully generated ITS sequences for 76% of the historical collections, and our results show that an integrative approach is the gold-standard for understanding diversity in this group.more » « less
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Abstract Recent studies have uncovered remarkable diversity inDictyonemas.lat. basidiolichens, here recognized as subtribe Dictyonemateae. This group includes five genera and 148 species, but hundreds more await description. The photobionts of these lichens belong toRhizonema, a recently resurrected cyanobacterial genus known by a single species. To further investigate photobiont diversity within Dictyonemateae, we generated 765 new cyanobacterial sequences from 635 specimens collected from 18 countries. The ITS barcoding locus supported the recognition of 200 mycobiont (fungal) species among these samples, but the photobiont diversity was comparatively low. Our analyses revealed three main divisions ofRhizonema, with two repeatedly recovered as monophyletic (proposed as new species), and the third mostly paraphyletic. The paraphyletic lineage corresponds toR. interruptumand partnered with mycobionts from all five genera in Dictyonemateae. There was no evidence of photobiont‐mycobiont co‐speciation, but one of the monophyletic lineages ofRhizonemaappears to partner predominantly with one of the two major clades ofCora(mycobiont) with samples collected largely from the northern Andes. Molecular clock estimations indicate theRhizonemaspecies are much older than the fungal species in the Dictyonemateae, suggesting that these basidiolichens obtained their photobionts from older ascolichen lineages and the photobiont variation in extant lineages of Dictyonemateae is the result of multiple photobiont switches. These results support the hypothesis of lichens representing fungal farmers, in which diverse mycobiont lineages associate with a substantially lower diversity of photobionts by sharing those photobionts best suited for the lichen symbiosis among multiple and often unrelated mycobiont lineages.more » « less
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