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Data from: In and out of refugia: historical patterns of diversity and demography in the North American Caesar’s mushroom species complex

Cite this dataset

Sánchez-Ramirez, Santiago et al. (2015). Data from: In and out of refugia: historical patterns of diversity and demography in the North American Caesar’s mushroom species complex [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.h26v5

Abstract

Some of the effects of past climate dynamics on plant and animal diversity make-up have been relatively well studied, but to less extent in fungi. Pleistocene refugia are thought to harbor high biological diversity (i.e. phylogenetic lineages and genetic diversity), mainly as a product of increased reproductive isolation and allele conservation. In addition, high extinction rates and genetic erosion is expected in previously glaciated regions. Some of the consequences of past climate dynamics might involve changes in range and population size that can result in divergence and incipient or cryptic speciation. Many of these dynamic processes and patterns can be inferred through phylogenetic and coalescent methods. In this study, we first delimit species within a group of closely related edible ectomycorrhizal Amanita from North America (the American Caesar's mushrooms species complex) using multi-locus coalescent-based approaches; and then address questions related to effects of Pleistocene climate change on the diversity and genetics of the group. Our study includes extensive geographic sampling throughout the distribution range, and DNA sequences from three nuclear protein-coding genes. Results reveal cryptic diversity and high speciation rates in refugia. Population sizes and expansions seem to be larger at mid-range latitudes (Mexican highlands and SE USA). Range shifts are proportional to population size expansions, which were overall more common during the Pleistocene. This study documents responses to past climate change in fungi, and also highlights the applicability of the multi-species coalescent in comparative phylogeographic analyses and diversity assessments that include ancestral species.

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