2021
DOI: 10.1111/mec.15884
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Sharing and double‐dating in the lichen world

Abstract: Historic and modern efforts to understand lichen diversity and evolution have overwhelmingly concentrated on that of the fungal partner, which represents one of the most taxonomically diverse nutritional modes among the Fungi. But what about the algal and cyanobacterial symbionts? An explosion of studies on these cryptic symbionts over the past 20+ years has facilitated a richer understanding of their diversity, patterns of association, and the symbiosis itself. In a From the Cover article in this issue of Mol… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
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“…Trebouxia Puymaly Tschermak-Woess (Trebouxiales, Trebouxiaceae) is one of the most frequent lichen symbionts, associating with over 7,000 species of lichen-forming fungi from across a wide range of fungal classes (Lücking et al, 2017). Trebouxia is among the most widespread phycobionts, and it associates with a broad range of lichen-forming fungi; estimated to be 80% in temperate regions and more than 20% worldwide (Muggia et al, 2020;Nelsen, 2021). To date, 29 Trebouxia species have been described based on a combination of morphological traits and genetic diversity .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Trebouxia Puymaly Tschermak-Woess (Trebouxiales, Trebouxiaceae) is one of the most frequent lichen symbionts, associating with over 7,000 species of lichen-forming fungi from across a wide range of fungal classes (Lücking et al, 2017). Trebouxia is among the most widespread phycobionts, and it associates with a broad range of lichen-forming fungi; estimated to be 80% in temperate regions and more than 20% worldwide (Muggia et al, 2020;Nelsen, 2021). To date, 29 Trebouxia species have been described based on a combination of morphological traits and genetic diversity .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%