Data from: The supposedly well-known carbonate indicator Tortella tortuosa (Pottiaceae, Bryophyta) split into eight species in Europe

We present a first treatment of the Tortella tortuosa complex for Europe . We analysed molecular relationships based on the nuclear ITS and the plastid atp B- rbc L and rps 4 in a network context and thereafter characterized the identified entities by their morphology. We found eight morphologically...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hedenäs, Lars, Köckinger, Heribert
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2023
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.ngf1vhj0b
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Summary:We present a first treatment of the Tortella tortuosa complex for Europe . We analysed molecular relationships based on the nuclear ITS and the plastid atp B- rbc L and rps 4 in a network context and thereafter characterized the identified entities by their morphology. We found eight morphologically and molecularly distinct entities at the species level, which are also supported in ASAP analyses of the molecular data; one species includes two varieties. In some cases, nuclear and plastid data suggest different relationships and we found a few likely recent hybrid collections. To the main characters of taxonomic importance belong stem anatomy, leaf shape and papillosity. We describe three species as new: T. commutata (a widespread plant; including the new var. valida), T. dolomitica (known only from the Alps) and T. splendida (an Arctic-alpine element), replacing T. arctica auct. For T. angustifolia and T. robusta (both montane) new combinations at the species level are provided. Tortella bambergeri (a submediterranean element), T. fleischeri (an Alpine element, recurring in Scotland) and T. tortuosa s. str. (widespread) complete this informal group of morphologically similar and partly related species. The species differ in ecological requirements and distribution areas, although mixed stands of two or three species are frequent. The area richest in species in Europe is the Alps with all eight species, whereas we found only four from Scandinavia. The data includes two files: tort_final_ITS_sic.fas: ITS alignment with base positions 1-781 and indel coding at positions 783-822. tort_final_CHL_sic.fas: (A) atpB-rbcL alignment with base positions 1-565 and indel coding at positions 567-581; (B) rps4 alignment with base positions 583-1184 and indel coding at position 1186. The files are in fasta format and can be opened by most softwares used in molecular analyses. Funding provided by: Carl Tryggers Stiftelse för Vetenskaplig Forskning Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100002805 Award ...