Artigo

Discovery or extinction of new scleroderma species in amazonia?

The Amazon Forest is a hotspot of biodiversity harboring an unknown number of undescribed taxa. Inventory studies are urgent, mainly in the areas most endangered by human activities such as extensive dam construction, where species could be in risk of extinction before being described and named. In...

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Autor principal: Baseia, Iuri Goulart
Outros Autores: Silva, Bianca Denise Barbosa da, Ishikawa, Noemia Kazue, Soares, João V.C., França, Isadora F., Ushijima, Shuji, Maekawa, Nitaro, Martín, María Paz
Grau: Artigo
Idioma: English
Publicado em: PLoS ONE 2020
Assuntos:
Acesso em linha: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/14678
id oai:repositorio:1-14678
recordtype dspace
spelling oai:repositorio:1-14678 Discovery or extinction of new scleroderma species in amazonia? Baseia, Iuri Goulart Silva, Bianca Denise Barbosa da Ishikawa, Noemia Kazue Soares, João V.C. França, Isadora F. Ushijima, Shuji Maekawa, Nitaro Martín, María Paz Internal Transcribed Spacer Dna, Fungal Amazonas Basidiomata Dna Sequence Fungal Structures Fungus Fungus Identification Fungus Spore Nonhuman Scleroderma (fungus) Scleroderma Anomalosporum Scleroderma Camassuense Scleroderma Duckei Species Extinction Species Identification Stellate Dehiscence Stelliform Dehiscence Verrucose Exoperidium Animals Basidiomycetes Brasil Chemistry Classification Forest Genetics Isolation And Purification Metabolism Phylogeny Animalss Basidiomycota Brasil Dna, Fungal Forests Phylogeny The Amazon Forest is a hotspot of biodiversity harboring an unknown number of undescribed taxa. Inventory studies are urgent, mainly in the areas most endangered by human activities such as extensive dam construction, where species could be in risk of extinction before being described and named. In 2015, intensive studies performed in a few locations in the Brazilian Amazon rainforest revealed three new species of the genus Scleroderma: S. anomalosporum, S. camassuense and S. duckei. The two first species were located in one of the many areas flooded by construction of hydroelectric dams throughout the Amazon; and the third in the Reserva Florestal Adolpho Ducke, a protected reverse by the INPA. The species were identified through morphology and molecular analyses of barcoding sequences (Internal Transcribed Spacer nrDNA). Scleroderma anomalosporum is characterized mainly by the smooth spores under LM in mature basidiomata (under SEM with small, unevenly distributed granules, a characteristic not observed in other species of the genus), the large size of the basidiomata, up to 120 mm diameter, and the stelliform dehiscence; S. camassuense mainly by the irregular to stellate dehiscence, the subreticulated spores and the bright sulfur-yellow colour, and Scleroderma duckei mainly by the verrucose exoperidium, stelliform dehiscence, and verrucose spores. Description, illustration and affinities with other species of the genus are provided. © 2016 Baseia et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. 2020-04-24T17:00:12Z 2020-04-24T17:00:12Z 2016 Artigo https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/14678 10.1371/journal.pone.0167879 en Volume 11, Número 12 Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Brazil http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/br/ application/pdf PLoS ONE
institution Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia - Repositório Institucional
collection INPA-RI
language English
topic Internal Transcribed Spacer
Dna, Fungal
Amazonas
Basidiomata
Dna Sequence
Fungal Structures
Fungus
Fungus Identification
Fungus Spore
Nonhuman
Scleroderma (fungus)
Scleroderma Anomalosporum
Scleroderma Camassuense
Scleroderma Duckei
Species Extinction
Species Identification
Stellate Dehiscence
Stelliform Dehiscence
Verrucose Exoperidium
Animals
Basidiomycetes
Brasil
Chemistry
Classification
Forest
Genetics
Isolation And Purification
Metabolism
Phylogeny
Animalss
Basidiomycota
Brasil
Dna, Fungal
Forests
Phylogeny
spellingShingle Internal Transcribed Spacer
Dna, Fungal
Amazonas
Basidiomata
Dna Sequence
Fungal Structures
Fungus
Fungus Identification
Fungus Spore
Nonhuman
Scleroderma (fungus)
Scleroderma Anomalosporum
Scleroderma Camassuense
Scleroderma Duckei
Species Extinction
Species Identification
Stellate Dehiscence
Stelliform Dehiscence
Verrucose Exoperidium
Animals
Basidiomycetes
Brasil
Chemistry
Classification
Forest
Genetics
Isolation And Purification
Metabolism
Phylogeny
Animalss
Basidiomycota
Brasil
Dna, Fungal
Forests
Phylogeny
Baseia, Iuri Goulart
Discovery or extinction of new scleroderma species in amazonia?
topic_facet Internal Transcribed Spacer
Dna, Fungal
Amazonas
Basidiomata
Dna Sequence
Fungal Structures
Fungus
Fungus Identification
Fungus Spore
Nonhuman
Scleroderma (fungus)
Scleroderma Anomalosporum
Scleroderma Camassuense
Scleroderma Duckei
Species Extinction
Species Identification
Stellate Dehiscence
Stelliform Dehiscence
Verrucose Exoperidium
Animals
Basidiomycetes
Brasil
Chemistry
Classification
Forest
Genetics
Isolation And Purification
Metabolism
Phylogeny
Animalss
Basidiomycota
Brasil
Dna, Fungal
Forests
Phylogeny
description The Amazon Forest is a hotspot of biodiversity harboring an unknown number of undescribed taxa. Inventory studies are urgent, mainly in the areas most endangered by human activities such as extensive dam construction, where species could be in risk of extinction before being described and named. In 2015, intensive studies performed in a few locations in the Brazilian Amazon rainforest revealed three new species of the genus Scleroderma: S. anomalosporum, S. camassuense and S. duckei. The two first species were located in one of the many areas flooded by construction of hydroelectric dams throughout the Amazon; and the third in the Reserva Florestal Adolpho Ducke, a protected reverse by the INPA. The species were identified through morphology and molecular analyses of barcoding sequences (Internal Transcribed Spacer nrDNA). Scleroderma anomalosporum is characterized mainly by the smooth spores under LM in mature basidiomata (under SEM with small, unevenly distributed granules, a characteristic not observed in other species of the genus), the large size of the basidiomata, up to 120 mm diameter, and the stelliform dehiscence; S. camassuense mainly by the irregular to stellate dehiscence, the subreticulated spores and the bright sulfur-yellow colour, and Scleroderma duckei mainly by the verrucose exoperidium, stelliform dehiscence, and verrucose spores. Description, illustration and affinities with other species of the genus are provided. © 2016 Baseia et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
format Artigo
author Baseia, Iuri Goulart
author2 Silva, Bianca Denise Barbosa da
Ishikawa, Noemia Kazue
Soares, João V.C.
França, Isadora F.
Ushijima, Shuji
Maekawa, Nitaro
Martín, María Paz
author2Str Silva, Bianca Denise Barbosa da
Ishikawa, Noemia Kazue
Soares, João V.C.
França, Isadora F.
Ushijima, Shuji
Maekawa, Nitaro
Martín, María Paz
title Discovery or extinction of new scleroderma species in amazonia?
title_short Discovery or extinction of new scleroderma species in amazonia?
title_full Discovery or extinction of new scleroderma species in amazonia?
title_fullStr Discovery or extinction of new scleroderma species in amazonia?
title_full_unstemmed Discovery or extinction of new scleroderma species in amazonia?
title_sort discovery or extinction of new scleroderma species in amazonia?
publisher PLoS ONE
publishDate 2020
url https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/14678
_version_ 1787144878502707200
score 11.755432