Steccherinaceae

Steccherinaceae
Steccherinum ochraceum
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Polyporales
Family: Steccherinaceae
Parmasto (1968)
Type genus
Steccherinum
Gray (1821)
Synonyms
  • Mycorrhaphiaceae Jülich (1982)

The Steccherinaceae are a family of about 200 species of fungi in the order Polyporales. It includes crust-like, toothed, and poroid species that cause a white rot in dead wood.

Taxonomy

The family was circumscribed by Czech mycologist Erast Parmasto in 1968.[1] Parmasto's original concept included species that are today classified in the Agaricales, Hymenochaetales, Polyporales, and Russulales. A large-scale molecular study published in 2012 by Otto Miettinen and colleagues redefined the limits of the Steccherinaceae to include most species of the poroid and hydnoid genera Antrodiella, Junghuhnia, and Steccherinum, as well as members of 12 other hydnoid and poroid genera. These genera were traditionally classified in the families Phanerochaetaceae, Polyporaceae, and Meruliaceae. They commented: "we see the need for at least 30 monophyletic, morphologically distinguishable genera. These include no fewer than 15 new genera for both polypores and hydnoid fungi, and revival of several unused genus names."[2] In a subsequent 2016 publication coauthored with Leif Ryvarden, Miettinen circumscribed several new genera—Antella, Austeria, Butyrea, Citripora, and Trulla.[3]

Phylogenetics

The genus Xanthoporus and the Loweomyces clade occupy a basal position of the Steccherinaceae phylogenetic tree. The genus Antrodiella was found to be polyphyletic, containing species spread throughout 10 distinct clades in the Steccherinaceae. Although it is not known with certainty what the closest relatives of the Steccherinaceae are, the genera Climacocystis, Hypochnicium, Meripilus, Podoscypha, and Pouzaroporia consistently appear close regardless of the gene used for phylogenetic analysis.[2]

Species in the core Antrodiella clade are very close genetically, even between species with a rather different spore shape, suggesting that these taxa may be undergoing ongoing rapid speciation. In some cases, DNA evidence shows that two morphologically nearly identical Antrodiella species are more distantly related than species that have larger phenotypic differences.[2]

Description

Most genera of the Steccherinaceae contain poroid or hydnoid fungi; Steccherinum contains both types. Steccherinaceae spores are usually broadly cylindrical or ellipsoid in shape. Characters useful for genus-level classification include fruit body colour and type, detailed hyphal structure, presence of cystidia, the strength of cyanophilic reactions of hyphae or spores, and the thickness of the spore walls. All species cause a white rot, and most grow on wood. Most of the species considered have a dimitic hyphal structure (containing both generative and skeletal hyphae), and most have clamps at the primary septa.[2]

Genera

Antrodiella pallasii
Frantisekia mentschulensis
Loweomyces fractipes
Type: Antella niemelaei
Type: Antrodiella semisupina
Type: Atraporiella neotropica
Type: Austeria citrea
Type: Butyrea luteoala
Type: Cabalodontia queletii
Type: Chaetoporus tenuis
Type: Citripora bannaensis
Type: Etheirodon fimbriatum
Type: Flabellophora superposita
Type: Flaviporus rufoflavus
Type: Frantisekia fissiliformis
Type: Junghuhnia crustacea
Type: Lamelloporus americanus
Type: Loweomyces fractipes
Type: Metuloidea tawa
Type: Mycorrhaphium adustum
Type: Nigroporus vinosus
Type: Steccherinum ochraceum
Type: Trulla dentipora
Type: Xanthoporus peckianus

Several genera are speculated to belong to the Steccherinaceae, although they have not yet been sampled: Amaurohydnum, Columnodontia, Cystidiodendron, Irpicochaete, Melzerodontia, Mycoleptodonoides, and Odontiochaete.[2] The genus Irpex has historically been placed in the Steccherinaceae,[4] but its type species, Irpex lacteus, is more closely related to Byssomerulius in the Phanerochaetaceae.[2]

References

  1. Parmasto, Erast (1968). Conspectus systematis coriciacearum. Tartu: Institutum Zoologicum & Botanicum Academiae Scientarium R.P.S.S Estonicae. p. 169.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Miettinen, Otto; Larsson, Ellen; Sjökvist, Elisabet; Larsson, Karl-Henrik (2012). "Comprehensive taxon sampling reveals unaccounted diversity and morphological plasticity in a group of dimitic polypores (Polyporales, Basidiomycota)" (PDF). Cladistics. 28: 251–270.
  3. Miettinen, Otto; Ryvarden, Leif (2016). "Polypore genera Antella, Austeria, Butyrea, Citripora, Metuloidea and Trulla (Steccherinaceae, Polyporales)". Annales Botanici Fennici. 53 (3–4): 157–172. doi:10.5735/085.053.0403.
  4. Cannon, P.F.; Kirk, P.M. (2007). Fungal Families of the World. Wallingford, UK: CAB International. pp. 337–338. ISBN 978-0-85199-827-5.
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