Loreleia

Genus of fungi From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Loreleia is a genus of brightly colored agarics in the Hymenochaetales that have an omphalinoid morphology.[1][2][3] They inhabit mosses and or liverworts on soil in temperate regions of the Northern Hemisphere.[4] Phylogenetically related agarics are in the genera Contumyces, Gyroflexus, Rickenella, Cantharellopsis and Blasiphalia, as well as the stipitate-stereoid genera Muscinupta and Cotylidia[5] and the clavaroid genus, Alloclavaria.[3] However, the large number of DNA base-pair changes causes a long-branch to form in phylogenetic analyses depicted as cladograms.

Quick facts Scientific classification, Type species ...
Loreleia
Loreleia postii
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Hymenochaetales
Family: Repetobasidiaceae
Genus: Loreleia
Type species
Loreleia postii
(Fr.) Redhead, Moncalvo, Vilgalys & Lutzoni (2002)
Species

L. marchantiae
L. postii
L. roseopallida

Close

In the field, to the eye, Loreleia is most similar to Rickenella because of the orangish colors and omphalinoid shape, but microscopically it differs by the absence of cystidia that in Rickenella make the latter minutely fuzzy as seen with a hand lens.[6] Loreleia penetrates the rhizoids of liverworts and may form a type of symbiosis with them,[7] but in axenic culture tests, L. marchantiae killed Marchantia polymorpha when directly inoculated[8] in contrast to the absence of necrosis in nature in situ. In nature Loreleia often occur in wet areas such as seepages with their hosts, Marchantia.

Older literature often treats the species, like L. postii and L. marchantiae, in the genera Omphalina or Gerronema.

Etymology

Loreleia was named after the American mycologist, Dr. Lorelei L. Norvell (1943-2023),[9] who studied omphalinoid agarics,[10] and who apropos was in turn named after the riverine Lorelei of folklore.

References

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