The genus Cortinarius should not (yet) be split.

IMA Fungus

Naturalis Biodiversity Center, Darwinweg 2, 2333 CR, Leiden, The Netherlands.

Published: August 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The genus Cortinarius is known for its rich diversity, with thousands of species that play a key role as ectomycorrhizal fungi in relationships with vascular plants globally.
  • Recent phylogenomic studies attempted to elevate Cortinarius to the family level and split it into ten new genera, but these classifications face challenges due to unresolved phylogenetic relationships.
  • The authors argue against splitting the Cortinarius genus based on current evidence, highlighting the need for careful evaluation of phylogenomic data before making significant taxonomic changes.

Article Abstract

The genus Cortinarius (Agaricales, Basidiomycota) is one of the most species-rich fungal genera, with thousands of species reported. Cortinarius species are important ectomycorrhizal fungi and form associations with many vascular plants globally. Until recently Cortinarius was the single genus of the family Cortinariaceae, despite several attempts to provide a workable, lower-rank hierarchical structure based on subgenera and sections. The first phylogenomic study for this group elevated the old genus Cortinarius to family level and the family was split into ten genera, of which seven were described as new. Here, by careful re-examination of the recently published phylogenomic dataset, we detected extensive gene-tree/species-tree conflicts using both concatenation and multispecies coalescent approaches. Our analyses demonstrate that the Cortinarius phylogeny remains unresolved and the resulting phylogenomic hypotheses suffer from very short and unsupported branches in the backbone. We can confirm monophyly of only four out of ten suggested new genera, leaving uncertain the relationships between each other and the general branching order. Thorough exploration of the tree space demonstrated that the topology on which Cortinarius revised classification relies on does not represent the best phylogenetic hypothesis and should not be used as constrained topology to include additional species. For this reason, we argue that based on available evidence the genus Cortinarius should not (yet) be split. Moreover, considering that phylogenetic uncertainty translates to taxonomic uncertainty, we advise for careful evaluation of phylogenomic datasets before proposing radical taxonomic and nomenclatural changes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11321212PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s43008-024-00159-4DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • The genus Cortinarius is known for its rich diversity, with thousands of species that play a key role as ectomycorrhizal fungi in relationships with vascular plants globally.
  • Recent phylogenomic studies attempted to elevate Cortinarius to the family level and split it into ten new genera, but these classifications face challenges due to unresolved phylogenetic relationships.
  • The authors argue against splitting the Cortinarius genus based on current evidence, highlighting the need for careful evaluation of phylogenomic data before making significant taxonomic changes.
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