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Home › Publications › On the origin of bird’s nest fungi: Phylogenomic analyses of fungi in the Nidulariaceae (Agaricales, Basidiomycota)

On the origin of bird’s nest fungi: Phylogenomic analyses of fungi in the Nidulariaceae (Agaricales, Basidiomycota)

Published in:

Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 193 , 108010 ( 2024)

Author(s):

Kraisitudomsook, Nattapol, Ahrendt, Steven, Riley, Robert, LaButti, Kurt, Lipzen, Anna, Daum, Chris, Barry, Kerrie, Grigoriev, Igor V, Rämä, Teppo, Martin, Francis, Smith, Matthew E

DOI:

10.1016/j.ympev.2024.108010

Abstract:

Nidulariaceae, also known as bird’s nest fungi, is an understudied group of mushroom-forming fungi. The common name is derived from their nest-like morphology. Bird’s nest fungi are ubiquitous wood decomposers or saprobes on dung. Recent studies showed that species in the Nidulariaceae form a monophyletic group with five sub-clades. However, phylogenetic relationships among genera and placement of Nidulariaceae are still unclear. We present phylogenomic analyses of bird’s nest fungi and related Agaricales fungi to gain insight into the evolution of Nidulariaceae. A species tree with 17 newly generated genomes of bird’s nest fungi and representatives from all major clades of Agaricales was constructed using 1044 single-copy genes to explore the intergeneric relationships and pinpoint the placement of Nidulariaceae within Agaricales. We corroborated the hypothesis that bird’s nest fungi are sister to Squamanitaceae, which includes mushroom-shaped fungi with a stipe and pileus that are saprobes and mycoparasites. Lastly, stochastic character mapping of discrete traits on phylogenies (SIMMAP) suggests that the ancestor of bird’s nest fungi likely possessed an evanescent, globose peridium without strings attaching to the spore packets (funiculi). This analysis suggests that the funiculus was gained twice and that the persistent, cupulate peridium form was gained at least four times and lost once. However, alternative coding schemes and datasets with a wider array of Agaricales produced conflicting results during ancestral state reconstruction, indicating that there is some uncertainty in the number of peridium transitions and that taxon sampling may significantly alter ancestral state reconstructions. Overall, our results suggest that several key morphological characters of Nidulariaceae have been subject to homoplasy.

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