6 research outputs found
Appendix A. A map showing the location of the 56 sites studied on La Gomera Island, Canary Islands, Spain.
A map showing the location of the 56 sites studied on La Gomera Island, Canary Islands, Spain
Appendix B. Species list including information on their phylogenetic group, red-list category, affinity to the freshwater habitat and the bioclimatic belt, and their indicator-species values.
Species list including information on their phylogenetic group, red-list category, affinity to the freshwater habitat and the bioclimatic belt, and their indicator-species values
Appendix C. Spearman's correlation coefficients among habitat properties in the 56 freshwater sites analyzed.
Spearman's correlation coefficients among habitat properties in the 56 freshwater sites analyzed
Dataset1_USYB-2014-217_R2
DATASET S1. Voucher information (a), including the code sample, geographic coordinates and the geographic origin, and GenBank accession numbers (b) and for each specimen analyzed. A total of 1925 cpDNA and 465 nrDNA sequences were produced for an overall of 649 specimens analyzed. A dash in a given locus column indicates that the sequencing failed; an empty cell indicates that that particular locus was not used for a given specie
SupplementaryInformation_USYB-2014-217_R2
Supplementary material includes TABLES S1 to S6 and FIGURES S1 to S
Integrative taxonomy reveals too extensive lumping and a new species in the moss genus <i>Amphidium</i> (Bryophyta)
<p>An integrative taxonomic approach, including molecular phylogenetic reconstructions based on plastid <i>rps4-trnF</i> and nuclear ITS sequences, statistical analysis of morphological-anatomical characters, and classical taxonomy, indicates that the reduction of 13 <i>Amphidium</i> species to three in a recent morphological revision represents a case of too extensive lumping. Instead, six <i>Amphidium</i> species can be distinguished based on molecular and morphological data, the widespread <i>Amphidium lapponicum</i>, <i>A. mougeotii</i>, and <i>A. tortuosum</i>, as well as the Macaronesian endemic <i>A. curvipes</i>, the North American endemic <i>A. californicum</i>, and a newly discovered species from Central Asia (southern Siberia and northern Mongolia), <i>A. asiaticum</i> sp. nov. Diagnostic morphological characters for all six species are discussed. The present data confirm that species diversity of <i>Amphidium</i> is highest in the Holarctic, where all six species occur.</p