Studies of Laboulbeniales on Myrmica ants (IV): host-related diversity and thallus distribution patterns of Rickia wasmannii

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Studies of Laboulbeniales on Myrmica ants (IV) : host-related diversity and thallus distribution patterns of Rickia wasmannii. / Haelewaters, Danny ; Boer, Peter; Báthori, Ferenc; Rádai, Zoltán ; Reboleira, Ana Sofia; Tartally, András; Pfiegler, Walter; De Kesel, André; Nedvěd, Oldřich.

I: Parasite, Bind 26, 29, 2019.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Haelewaters, D, Boer, P, Báthori, F, Rádai, Z, Reboleira, AS, Tartally, A, Pfiegler, W, De Kesel, A & Nedvěd, O 2019, 'Studies of Laboulbeniales on Myrmica ants (IV): host-related diversity and thallus distribution patterns of Rickia wasmannii', Parasite, bind 26, 29. https://doi.org/10.1051/parasite/2019028

APA

Haelewaters, D., Boer, P., Báthori, F., Rádai, Z., Reboleira, A. S., Tartally, A., Pfiegler, W., De Kesel, A., & Nedvěd, O. (2019). Studies of Laboulbeniales on Myrmica ants (IV): host-related diversity and thallus distribution patterns of Rickia wasmannii. Parasite, 26, [29]. https://doi.org/10.1051/parasite/2019028

Vancouver

Haelewaters D, Boer P, Báthori F, Rádai Z, Reboleira AS, Tartally A o.a. Studies of Laboulbeniales on Myrmica ants (IV): host-related diversity and thallus distribution patterns of Rickia wasmannii. Parasite. 2019;26. 29. https://doi.org/10.1051/parasite/2019028

Author

Haelewaters, Danny ; Boer, Peter ; Báthori, Ferenc ; Rádai, Zoltán ; Reboleira, Ana Sofia ; Tartally, András ; Pfiegler, Walter ; De Kesel, André ; Nedvěd, Oldřich. / Studies of Laboulbeniales on Myrmica ants (IV) : host-related diversity and thallus distribution patterns of Rickia wasmannii. I: Parasite. 2019 ; Bind 26.

Bibtex

@article{852ab7c3d4a1478b9b25976d31b12e68,
title = "Studies of Laboulbeniales on Myrmica ants (IV): host-related diversity and thallus distribution patterns of Rickia wasmannii",
abstract = "Fungal species identities are often based on morphological features, but current molecular phylogenetic and other approaches almost always lead to the discovery of multiple species in single morpho-species. According to the morphological species concept, the ant-parasitic fungus Rickia wasmannii (Ascomycota, Laboulbeniales) is a single species with pan-European distribution and a wide host range. Since its description, it has been reported from ten species of Myrmica (Hymenoptera, Formicidae), of which two belong to the rubra-group and the other eight to the phylogenetically distinct scabrinodis-group. We found evidence for R. wasmannii being a single phylogenetic species using sequence data from two loci. Apparently, the original morphological description (dating back to 1899) represents a single phylogenetic species. Furthermore, the biology and host-parasite interactions of R. wasmannii are not likely to be affected by genetic divergence among different populations of the fungus, implying comparability among studies conducted on members of different ant populations. We found no differences in total thallus number on workers between Myrmica species, but we did observe differences in the pattern of thallus distribution over the body. The locus of infection is the frontal side of the head in Myrmica rubra and M. sabuleti whereas in M. scabrinodis the locus of infection differs between worker ants from Hungary (gaster tergites) and the Netherlands (frontal head). Possible explanations for these observations are differences among host species and among populations of the same species in (i) how ant workers come into contact with the fungus, (ii) grooming efficacy, and (iii) cuticle surface characteristics.",
author = "Danny Haelewaters and Peter Boer and Ferenc B{\'a}thori and Zolt{\'a}n R{\'a}dai and Reboleira, {Ana Sofia} and Andr{\'a}s Tartally and Walter Pfiegler and {De Kesel}, Andr{\'e} and Old{\v r}ich Nedv{\v e}d",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.1051/parasite/2019028",
language = "English",
volume = "26",
journal = "Parasite",
issn = "1252-607X",
publisher = "E D P Sciences",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Studies of Laboulbeniales on Myrmica ants (IV)

T2 - host-related diversity and thallus distribution patterns of Rickia wasmannii

AU - Haelewaters, Danny

AU - Boer, Peter

AU - Báthori, Ferenc

AU - Rádai, Zoltán

AU - Reboleira, Ana Sofia

AU - Tartally, András

AU - Pfiegler, Walter

AU - De Kesel, André

AU - Nedvěd, Oldřich

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - Fungal species identities are often based on morphological features, but current molecular phylogenetic and other approaches almost always lead to the discovery of multiple species in single morpho-species. According to the morphological species concept, the ant-parasitic fungus Rickia wasmannii (Ascomycota, Laboulbeniales) is a single species with pan-European distribution and a wide host range. Since its description, it has been reported from ten species of Myrmica (Hymenoptera, Formicidae), of which two belong to the rubra-group and the other eight to the phylogenetically distinct scabrinodis-group. We found evidence for R. wasmannii being a single phylogenetic species using sequence data from two loci. Apparently, the original morphological description (dating back to 1899) represents a single phylogenetic species. Furthermore, the biology and host-parasite interactions of R. wasmannii are not likely to be affected by genetic divergence among different populations of the fungus, implying comparability among studies conducted on members of different ant populations. We found no differences in total thallus number on workers between Myrmica species, but we did observe differences in the pattern of thallus distribution over the body. The locus of infection is the frontal side of the head in Myrmica rubra and M. sabuleti whereas in M. scabrinodis the locus of infection differs between worker ants from Hungary (gaster tergites) and the Netherlands (frontal head). Possible explanations for these observations are differences among host species and among populations of the same species in (i) how ant workers come into contact with the fungus, (ii) grooming efficacy, and (iii) cuticle surface characteristics.

AB - Fungal species identities are often based on morphological features, but current molecular phylogenetic and other approaches almost always lead to the discovery of multiple species in single morpho-species. According to the morphological species concept, the ant-parasitic fungus Rickia wasmannii (Ascomycota, Laboulbeniales) is a single species with pan-European distribution and a wide host range. Since its description, it has been reported from ten species of Myrmica (Hymenoptera, Formicidae), of which two belong to the rubra-group and the other eight to the phylogenetically distinct scabrinodis-group. We found evidence for R. wasmannii being a single phylogenetic species using sequence data from two loci. Apparently, the original morphological description (dating back to 1899) represents a single phylogenetic species. Furthermore, the biology and host-parasite interactions of R. wasmannii are not likely to be affected by genetic divergence among different populations of the fungus, implying comparability among studies conducted on members of different ant populations. We found no differences in total thallus number on workers between Myrmica species, but we did observe differences in the pattern of thallus distribution over the body. The locus of infection is the frontal side of the head in Myrmica rubra and M. sabuleti whereas in M. scabrinodis the locus of infection differs between worker ants from Hungary (gaster tergites) and the Netherlands (frontal head). Possible explanations for these observations are differences among host species and among populations of the same species in (i) how ant workers come into contact with the fungus, (ii) grooming efficacy, and (iii) cuticle surface characteristics.

U2 - 10.1051/parasite/2019028

DO - 10.1051/parasite/2019028

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 31106730

VL - 26

JO - Parasite

JF - Parasite

SN - 1252-607X

M1 - 29

ER -

ID: 218352267