Robert Lücking

Robert Lücking
Botanischer Garten und Botanisches Museum Berlin

PhD

About

665
Publications
386,134
Reads
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31,538
Citations
Additional affiliations
October 2011 - present
George Mason University
Position
  • Professor (Associate)
August 2001 - present
Field Museum of Natural History
Position
  • Adjunct Curator & Collections Manager
January 1995 - July 1998
Ulm University
Position
  • PostDoc Position

Publications

Publications (665)
Article
Full-text available
Reprint of: The lichen genus Sticta in Middle Earth. Istaria 6587: 886-890. A revision of the lichen genus Sticta in Middle Earth is presented. A total of 11 species is distinguished, including three new species and two new combinations: S. annulospora comb. nova, S. discocyanea comb. nova, S. inversa spec. nova, S. rhodobionta spec. nova, and S. v...
Article
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The internal transcribed spacer region (ITS) of the nuclear rDNA cistron represents the barcoding locus for Fungi. Intragenomic variation of this multicopy gene can interfere with accurate phylogenetic reconstruction of biological entities. We investigated the amount and nature of this variation for the lichenized fungus Cora inversa in the Hygroph...
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As a first step towards the production of a List of Protected Generic Names for Fungi, a without-prejudice list is presented here as a basis for future discussion and the production of a List for formal adoption. We include 6995 generic names out of the 17072 validly published names proposed for fungi and invite comments from all interested mycolog...
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Dothideomycetes comprise a highly diverse range of fungi characterized mainly by asci with two wall layers (bitunicate asci) and often with fissitunicate dehiscence. Many species are saprobes, with many asexual states comprising important plant pathogens. They are also endophytes, epiphytes, fungicolous, lichenized, or lichenicolous fungi. They occ...
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South Korea is covered primarily by temperate vegetation; therefore, foliicolous lichens may not be expected to play an important role in its lichen flora. However, this study describes four foliicolous lichen species, Strigula concreta, S. macrocarpa, S. melanobapha, and S. subelegans, which are new to South Korea. These findings will lead to furt...
Article
Full-text available
As a first step towards the production of a List of Protected Generic Names for Fungi, a without-prejudice list is presented here as a basis for future discussion and the production of a List for formal adoption. We include 6995 generic names out of the 17072 validly published names proposed for fungi and invite comments from all interested mycolog...
Article
Full-text available
Lücking, R., Breuss, O., Nelsen, M. P., Navarro, E., Aptroot, A., Chaves, J. L., Trest, M. & Will-Wolf, S. 2013. Porina squamulifera (lichenized Ascomycota: Porinaceae), a new species from tropical rainforest in Costa Rica with unique thallus morphology. — Herzogia 26: 223–230. The new lichenized fungal species Porina squamulifera is described. It...
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Four new species of Coenogonium are described from the Caribbean island of Puerto Rico-C. aurantiacum Mercado-Diaz & Lucking, C. borinquense Mercado-Diaz & Lucking, C. dimorphicum Mercado-Diaz & Lucking and C. portoricense Mercado-Diaz & Lucking. All were discovered in small and highly fragmented forest remnants of relatively rare Puerto Rican fore...
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Pyrenula sanguinea Aptroot, M. Caceres & Lucking is described from branches of trees in Amazonian rain forest in the state of Rondonia, Brazil. It is characterized by bright red, pseudostromatic ascomata with fused walls, closely resembling those of Trypethelium eluteriae and related species except for the color. The brown ascospores deviate from t...
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The nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region is the formal fungal barcode and in most cases the marker of choice for exploration of fungal diversity in environmental samples. Two problems are particularly acute in the pursuit of satisfactory taxonomic assignment of newly generated ITS sequences: (i) the lack of an inclusive, relia...
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Belonia and Pachyphiale were recently shown to be nested within Gyalecta. Here, new combinations and names are introduced for species earlier classified in Belonia: Gyalecta calcicola (Walt. Watson) Baloch & Lücking comb. nov., G. herculina (Rehm) Baloch, Lumbsch & Wedin comb. nov., G. incarnata (Th. Fr. & Graewe) Baloch & Lücking comb. nov., G. lu...
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As part of a larger systematic and taxonomic revision, including molecular phylogenetic analysis, of lichenized Basidiomycota in the Dictyonema clade, ten species are described as new from tropical America, seven in the foliose genus Cora and three in the filamentous genus Dictyonema: Cora arachnoidea J. E. Hern. & Lücking, sp. nov., C. aspera Wilk...
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Molecular phylogenies using 1-4 gene regions and information on ecology, morphology and pigment chemistry were used in a partial revision of the agaric family Hygro- phoraceae. The phylogenetically supported genera we recognize here in the Hygrophoraceae based on these and previous analyses are: Acantholichen, Ampulloclitocybe, Arrhenia, Cantharell...
Article
Phylogenetic studies indicate that the basidiolichen genus Dictyonema s.lat., often thought to represent only a single genus with few species, includes several well-supported genus-level clades, all of which form associations with a unique lineage of obligately lichenized cyanobacteria (Rhizonema). In an attempt to elucidate the evolution and genus...
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As part of a phylogenetic and taxonomic revision of the lichenized genus Sticta in Colombia, six new species with apotheciate thalli but lacking vegetative propagules are described: Sticta atroandensis Moncada & Lücking sp. nov., S. brevior Moncada & Lücking sp. nov., S. lumbschiana Moncada & Lücking sp. nov., S. macrocyphellata Moncada & Coca sp....
Article
The phylogenetic position of the genus Geisleria and its type species G. sychnogonioides was reconstructed using sequence data of the mitochondrial small subunit (mtSSU), the nuclear large subunit rDNA (nuLSU) and the first subunit of the RNA polymerase (RPB1). The species, previously classified in Verrucariaceae (Eurotiomycetes) and Strigulaceae (...
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A new species of Acanthothecis is described in the Atlantic Forest of northeastern Brazil. Unlike any other species in the genus, it has distinctly pseudo-stromatic ascomata that resemble those of the genus Sarcographa. However, its apically spinulose paraphyses, I-negative ascospores with thin endospore closely resemble those of other Acanthotheci...
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Questions

Questions (6)
Question
I need to run GMYC but seem to be hitting a wall. The GMYC web server is not responding for hours, although the tree is quite small. I have previously also done this in R and wanted to do this now, but apparently the "splits" package which contains the GMYC algorithm does not exist anymore? There only is a package "split" which has nothing to do with "splits". Any advice would be highly appreciated.
Robert
Question
I generally use GTR+I+G for phylogenetic analysis, as this is the universal substitution model, with other models being simplifications by equalizing rates. Model testing generally uses the argument that GTR may be overfitting, but I have not yet seen a study where that would really cause substantial effects. Usually, when I do model testing, GTR+I+G is always close to the top and the differences in likelihood and AICc or BIC are usually minor. Also, commonly I get e.g. TVM+I+G as best fitting model, which differs from GTR+I+G in that AG and GC are equal (sometimes TPM, with three equal rates). Given that model testing depends on alignment details (e.g. removal of ambiguously aligned regions changes original base frequencies), among other factors, and there are parameters other than base and substitution frequencies that may influence particular substitutions (e.g. secondary structure), I wonder whether it is actually justified to chose an only slightly deviating model over GTR, when the latter is close to the best model in AICc or BIC and actual topologies or support, when using e.g. TVM or GTR, do not really differ, except maybe for non-supported branches. Isn't it OK to use GTR per default, making no assumptions about the data, compared to fitting a marginally better model such as TVM that depends on certain details and in the end makes no or very little difference?
Question
I would like to start a small discussion on the problem of the taxonomic paradoxon, in popular saying also known as the chicken and egg problem. This recent paper claims to solve the paradoxon, but I believe this is not the case. While one can certainly argue that even the "species" is an artificial construct, as long as we do taxonomy and we use taxonomy as a tool to address evolutionary processes, we should be able to resolve the taxonomic paradoxon of species delimitation through time. Horizontally it can be done by using parameters such as phylogeny (topology, support, branch length) and reproductive biology. However, these measures collapse entirely if we look at a lineage backwards in time. By default, we postulate that any generation stems from a prior generation belonging to the same species. Even if mutations occur and are inherited, this does per se not "generate" new species, as speciation is a lengthy process of genetic variation sorted out by environmental factors. The only instance one could imagine spontaneous speciation is where partner recognition is highly specific based on narrow chemical stimuli (key-lock principle), but that would apply to particular organisms only. So the paradoxon lies in the notion that if you compare individuals along the same lineage using a given distance, they would resolve as distinct species, but you could freely shift that intervall along the time axis and hence there would be no fixed moment of speciation, which means you would be essentially unable to assign individuals to distinct taxa along that lineage. By extension, if you had access to all living individuals ever existing on this planet, you could not classify them naturally, since even at a branching point, two subsequent generations could not be distinguished. So how to we solve this? Or are we just happy that our taxonomic classifications rely on the fact that all past individuals that could mess with them are extinct? One of the practical applications of this important question is paraphyly, and the many different opinions in this respect seem to indicate that this question can indeed not be resolved?

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