Systematic analysis of Russula in the North American Rocky Mountain alpine zone

Russula Pers. (Russulales) is an important ectomycorrhizal fungal genus in alpine and Arctic regions where it occurs in association with Salix, Betula, Dryas, and Polygonum. Despite Russula’s importance and abundance in Arctic and alpine systems there has been no in-depth systematic analysis of the...

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Main Author: Noffsinger, Chance Ray
Other Authors: Chairperson, Graduate Committee: Cathy L. Cripps
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Montana State University - Bozeman, College of Agriculture 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.montana.edu/xmlui/handle/1/15902
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record_format openpolar
spelling ftmontanastateu:oai:scholarworks.montana.edu:1/15902 2023-05-15T14:41:20+02:00 Systematic analysis of Russula in the North American Rocky Mountain alpine zone Noffsinger, Chance Ray Chairperson, Graduate Committee: Cathy L. Cripps Rocky Mountains Europe Arctic regions Alpine regions 2020 application/pdf https://scholarworks.montana.edu/xmlui/handle/1/15902 en eng Montana State University - Bozeman, College of Agriculture https://scholarworks.montana.edu/xmlui/handle/1/15902 Copyright 2020 by Chance Ray Noffsinger Russulales Mushrooms Genetics Classification Morphology Thesis 2020 ftmontanastateu 2022-08-13T22:40:21Z Russula Pers. (Russulales) is an important ectomycorrhizal fungal genus in alpine and Arctic regions where it occurs in association with Salix, Betula, Dryas, and Polygonum. Despite Russula’s importance and abundance in Arctic and alpine systems there has been no in-depth systematic analysis of the genus in these habitats. This is also true for alpine areas of the Rocky Mountains where only four species of Russula have been casually reported above treeline. The genus Russula is large, diverse, and intraspecific morphological variation makes taxonomic classification difficult, which means verification using molecular techniques is necessary. This research compared Rocky Mountain alpine Russula collections to Arctic and alpine collections from Europe using an in-depth morphological study and a systematic molecular analysis of the nuc rDNA ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 region (ITS barcode) and the second largest subunit of the RNA polymerase II gene (RPB2). Over 130 Russula collections were sequenced including type material. This research confirmed eight species with intercontinental distributions in Arctic and alpine habitats, including R. nana, R. laccata, R. subrubens, R. cf. pascua, R. heterochroa, R. saliceticola, R. purpureofusca, and R. laevis. Two species are reported from subalpine habitats at treeline; R. montana with conifers and R. altaica with Betula. The Russula present in the Rocky Mountain alpine represent a subset of those known from other Arctic-alpine habitats and data show that multiple Russula species independently colonized alpine habitats. This is the first formal report of R. altaica, R. saliceticola, and R. subrubens in the Rocky Mountains and of R. heterochroa and R. purpureofusca in North America. Previous work matched sequences extracted from ectomycorrhiza in Canada to R. laevis, but this is the first work to collect this species and report it in North America. A key for the identification of alpine Russula in North America is provided. A history of Arctic and alpine mycology in North America is ... Thesis Arctic Montana State University (MSU): ScholarWorks Arctic Canada
institution Open Polar
collection Montana State University (MSU): ScholarWorks
op_collection_id ftmontanastateu
language English
topic Russulales
Mushrooms
Genetics
Classification
Morphology
spellingShingle Russulales
Mushrooms
Genetics
Classification
Morphology
Noffsinger, Chance Ray
Systematic analysis of Russula in the North American Rocky Mountain alpine zone
topic_facet Russulales
Mushrooms
Genetics
Classification
Morphology
description Russula Pers. (Russulales) is an important ectomycorrhizal fungal genus in alpine and Arctic regions where it occurs in association with Salix, Betula, Dryas, and Polygonum. Despite Russula’s importance and abundance in Arctic and alpine systems there has been no in-depth systematic analysis of the genus in these habitats. This is also true for alpine areas of the Rocky Mountains where only four species of Russula have been casually reported above treeline. The genus Russula is large, diverse, and intraspecific morphological variation makes taxonomic classification difficult, which means verification using molecular techniques is necessary. This research compared Rocky Mountain alpine Russula collections to Arctic and alpine collections from Europe using an in-depth morphological study and a systematic molecular analysis of the nuc rDNA ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 region (ITS barcode) and the second largest subunit of the RNA polymerase II gene (RPB2). Over 130 Russula collections were sequenced including type material. This research confirmed eight species with intercontinental distributions in Arctic and alpine habitats, including R. nana, R. laccata, R. subrubens, R. cf. pascua, R. heterochroa, R. saliceticola, R. purpureofusca, and R. laevis. Two species are reported from subalpine habitats at treeline; R. montana with conifers and R. altaica with Betula. The Russula present in the Rocky Mountain alpine represent a subset of those known from other Arctic-alpine habitats and data show that multiple Russula species independently colonized alpine habitats. This is the first formal report of R. altaica, R. saliceticola, and R. subrubens in the Rocky Mountains and of R. heterochroa and R. purpureofusca in North America. Previous work matched sequences extracted from ectomycorrhiza in Canada to R. laevis, but this is the first work to collect this species and report it in North America. A key for the identification of alpine Russula in North America is provided. A history of Arctic and alpine mycology in North America is ...
author2 Chairperson, Graduate Committee: Cathy L. Cripps
format Thesis
author Noffsinger, Chance Ray
author_facet Noffsinger, Chance Ray
author_sort Noffsinger, Chance Ray
title Systematic analysis of Russula in the North American Rocky Mountain alpine zone
title_short Systematic analysis of Russula in the North American Rocky Mountain alpine zone
title_full Systematic analysis of Russula in the North American Rocky Mountain alpine zone
title_fullStr Systematic analysis of Russula in the North American Rocky Mountain alpine zone
title_full_unstemmed Systematic analysis of Russula in the North American Rocky Mountain alpine zone
title_sort systematic analysis of russula in the north american rocky mountain alpine zone
publisher Montana State University - Bozeman, College of Agriculture
publishDate 2020
url https://scholarworks.montana.edu/xmlui/handle/1/15902
op_coverage Rocky Mountains
Europe
Arctic regions
Alpine regions
geographic Arctic
Canada
geographic_facet Arctic
Canada
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_relation https://scholarworks.montana.edu/xmlui/handle/1/15902
op_rights Copyright 2020 by Chance Ray Noffsinger
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