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Albee-Scott, SR. 2007. Does secotioid inertia drive the evolution of false-truffles? MYCOLOGICAL RESEARCH. 111(9):1030-1039.
Address:
Albee-Scott, SR, Utah State Univ, Dept Biol, 5305 Old Main Hill, Logan,
UT 84322
Secotioid inertia is a model implemented to explain the prevalence of
highly derived false truffles with no obvious connection to the
Homobasidiomycetes. The model accommodates the apparent lack of
epigeous sister taxa for some highly derived hypogeous lineages by
assuming that gasteromycetation in some fungi leads to the extinction
of their epigeous sister population. The derived state of some
hypogeous lineages suggests that they arose early in the evolution of
Homobasidiomycetes and that those groups were subject to conditions
that favoured hypogeous lineages such that the hypogeous fruit body
form became the predominant form for some lineages. The directional
selection component of secotioid inertia, termed secotioid drive, led
to the extinction of their epigeous sister taxon. Morphological and
molecular data from Russulaceae are used to model the evolutionary
stages of secotioid inertia. The resulting phylogenetic results are
compared with data from the order Leucogastrales, and the genus
Destuntzia. The implications of secotioid drive are discussed with
reference to gasteromycete phylogenetics, evolution, and conservation.
Specifically, secotioid inertia can be used to account for reversals in
fruit body morphology and instability in mycorrhizal formation.
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