Dacrymycetaceae

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Division:Basidiomycota
Family:Dacrymycetaceae
J. Schröt. 1888
Dacrymycetaceae
Guepiniopsis buccina, New York
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Dacrymycetes
Order: Dacrymycetales
Family: Dacrymycetaceae
J. Schröt. 1888
Type genus
Dacrymyces
Nees (1816)
Genera

Calocera
Cerinosterus
Dacryopinax
Dacryoscyphus
Dendrodacrys
Ditiola
Guepiniopsis
Femsjonia
Heterotextus

The Dacrymycetaceae are a family of fungi in the order Dacrymycetales. Species are saprotrophs and occur on dead wood. Their distribution is worldwide. Basidiocarps (fruit bodies) are ceraceous (waxy) to gelatinous, often yellow to orange, and variously clavarioid, disc-shaped, cushion-shaped, spathulate (spoon-shaped), or corticioid (effused).

Genera in the Dacrymycetaceae have traditionally been differentiated on basidiocarp morphology, in later years following the monographs of New Zealand mycologist Robert McNabb.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7] Molecular research, based on cladistic analysis of DNA sequences, has however shown that morphology is not a good indicator of natural relationships.[8] To date, only the recently described genus Dendrodacrys is monophyletic.[9] The remaining genera await further research.

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI