PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

Ecological Specialization of Two Photobiont-Specific Maritime Cyanolichen Species of the Genus Lichina.

  • Rüdiger Ortiz-Álvarez,
  • Asunción de Los Ríos,
  • Fernando Fernández-Mendoza,
  • Antonio Torralba-Burrial,
  • Sergio Pérez-Ortega

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0132718
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 7
p. e0132718

Abstract

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All fungi in the class Lichinomycetes are lichen-forming and exclusively associate with cyanobacteria. Two closely related maritime species of the genus Lichina (L. confinis and L. pygmaea) show similar distribution ranges in the Northeast Atlantic, commonly co-occurring at the same rocky shores but occupying different littoral zones. By means of 16S rRNA and phycocyanin operon markers we studied a) the phylogenetic relationships of cyanobionts associated with these species, b) the match of divergence times between both symbionts, and c) whether Lichina species differ in photobiont association and in how geography and ecology affect selectivity. The cyanobionts studied are closely related to both marine and freshwater strains of the genus Rivularia. We found evidence of a high specificity to particular cyanobiont lineages in both species: Lichina pygmaea and L. confinis incorporate specific lineages of Rivularia that do not overlap at the haplotype nor the OTU levels. Dating divergences of the fungal and cyanobacterial partners revealed an asynchronous origin of both lineages. Within each fungal species, selectivity varied across the studied area, influenced by environmental conditions (both atmospheric and marine), although patterns were highly correlated between both lichen taxa. Ecological speciation due to the differential association of photobionts to each littoral zone is suspected to have occurred in marine Lichina.