Authors
François Lutzoni, Frank Kauff, Cymon J Cox, David McLaughlin, Gail Celio, Bryn Dentinger, Mahajabeen Padamsee, David Hibbett, Timothy Y James, Elisabeth Baloch, Martin Grube, Valérie Reeb, Valérie Hofstetter, Conrad Schoch, A Elizabeth Arnold, Jolanta Miadlikowska, Joseph Spatafora, Desiree Johnson, Sarah Hambleton, Michael Crockett, Robert Shoemaker, Gi‐Ho Sung, Robert Lücking, Thorsten Lumbsch, Kerry O'Donnell, Manfred Binder, Paul Diederich, Damien Ertz, Cécile Gueidan, Karen Hansen, Richard C Harris, Kentaro Hosaka, Young‐Woon Lim, Brandon Matheny, Hiromi Nishida, Don Pfister, Jack Rogers, Amy Rossman, Imke Schmitt, Harrie Sipman, Jeffrey Stone, Junta Sugiyama, Rebecca Yahr, Rytas Vilgalys
Publication date
2004/10
Journal
American journal of botany
Volume
91
Issue
10
Pages
1446-1480
Publisher
Botanical Society of America
Description
Based on an overview of progress in molecular systematics of the true fungi (Fungi/Eumycota) since 1990, little overlap was found among single‐locus data matrices, which explains why no large‐scale multilocus phylogenetic analysis had been undertaken to reveal deep relationships among fungi. As part of the project “Assembling the Fungal Tree of Life” (AFTOL), results of four Bayesian analyses are reported with complementary bootstrap assessment of phylogenetic confidence based on (1) a combined two‐locus data set (nucSSU and nucLSU rDNA) with 558 species representing all traditionally recognized fungal phyla (Ascomycota, Basidiomycota, Chytridiomycota, Zygomycota) and the Glomeromycota, (2) a combined three‐locus data set (nucSSU, nucLSU, and mitSSU rDNA) with 236 species, (3) a combined three‐locus data set (nucSSU, nucLSU rDNA, and RPB2) with 157 species, and (4) a combined …
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