Cyphellostereum
Cyphellostereum | |
---|---|
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Fungi |
Division: | Basidiomycota |
Class: | Agaricomycetes |
Order: | Agaricales |
Family: | Hygrophoraceae |
Genus: | Cyphellostereum D.A.Reid (1965) |
Type species | |
Cyphellostereum pusiolum (Berk. & M.A.Curtis) D.A.Reid (1965) | |
Species | |
C. muscicola |
Cyphellostereum is a genus of basidiolichens.[1][2] Species produce white, somewhat cup-shaped fruit bodies on a thin film of green on soil which is the thallus. All Cyphellostereum species have nonamyloid spores and tissues, lack clamp connections, and also lack hymenial cystidia.
DNA research has shown that a common, north temperate species formerly known as Cyphellostereum laeve is not related to the type species and belongs in a quite separate order, the Hymenochaetales. It has been renamed Muscinupta laevis.[2]
Etymology
The name Cyphellostereum combines two generic names: Cyphella in reference to the inverted cupulate form (like the genus Cyphella); and Stereum, in reference to the stipitate fan-shape or bracket shape (as in species of Stereum).
See also
References
- ↑ Reid DA. (1965). "A monograph of the stipitate stereoid fungi". Beiheifte Nova Hedwigia. 18: 1–382.
- 1 2 Lawrey, JD, Lücking R, Sipman HJM, Chaves JL, Redhead SA, Bungartz F, Sikaroodi M, Gillevet PM. (2009). "High concentration of basidiolichens in a single family of agaricoid mushrooms (Basidiomycota: Agaricales: Hygrophoraceae)". Mycological Research. 113: 1154–1171. doi:10.1016/j.mycres.2009.07.016. PMID 19646529.