The Status of Nomadism as a Cultural Phenomenon in the Middle East
In: Journal of Asian and African studies: JAAS, Band 7, Heft 1-2, S. 122-131
ISSN: 1745-2538
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In: Journal of Asian and African studies: JAAS, Band 7, Heft 1-2, S. 122-131
ISSN: 1745-2538
This study explores species limits of a group of Clavaria species with taxonomic and nomenclatural problems and discusses the phylogeny and circumscription of the genus. The nuc 28S rDNA (28S) and internal transcribed spacer region phylogenies resolve species relationships, and the ITS is shown to be an adequate barcode marker for Clavaria. Yellow, clamped species of Clavaria are distributed in two clades, (i) C. flavostellifera, sister to C. incarnata and C. asterospora in ITS analyses, characterized by producing ornamented spores, and (ii) C. argillacea-C. citrinorubra-C. flavipes-C. sphagnicola, with smooth spores. Clavaria flavostellifera is described as new species based on morphological and molecular characters. Molecular evidence that supports C. sphagnicola as distinct from C. argillacea is provided. The usefulness of spore ornamentation as a taxonomic character is discussed; it is present only in some taxa and then only on spores trapped in the hymenium. Descriptions of C. argillacea, C. flavipes and C. sphagnicola are provided, along with color photographs and a key to yellow species of Clavaria with clamped basidia. Camarophyllopsis and Clavicorona are recovered within a paraphyletic Clavaria in our 28S phylogeny. Clampless contextual hyphae and narrow, slightly thick-walled mycelial hyphae are proposed as synapomorphies of Camarophyllopsis and Clavaria. ; This work was partially supported (I. Olariaga) by a researcher training grant from the Basque government (2002/2003) and (I. Kautmanova´) by a grant from the European Commission's (FP6) Integrated Infrastructure Initiative programme, SYNTHESYS (ES-TAF 4137) and national project VEGA 02/0088/13. ; Peer reviewed
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