Melaspileaceae

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Melaspileaceae
2014-06-28 Melaspilea lentiginosa (Lyell ex Leight.) Mull. Arg 511599.jpg
Melaspilea lentiginosa
Scientific classification OOjs UI icon edit-ltr.svg
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: Dothideomycetes
Order: Eremithallales
Family: Melaspileaceae
W.Watson (1929)
Type genus
Melaspilea
Nyl. (1857)
Genera

Encephalographa
Melaspilea

Synonyms [1]

Melaspileaceae is a family of lichenised and saprobic fungi in the class Dothideomycetes , order Eremithallales . [2] A 2015 phylogenetic study narrowed the family to two genera, Melaspilea and Encephalographa , and showed that Eremithallales, which had been proposed in 2008, belongs within the Dothideomycetes, and treated Eremithallaceae as a synonym of Melaspileaceae. Many names historically kept in Melaspileaceae but having lichenicolous or saprobic life histories are part of the order Asterinales and belong in segregate genera such as Melaspileella , Melaspileopsis , Stictographa , Karschia , Buelliella , Hemigrapha and Labrocarpon . Members of the family are characterised by small, dark, rounded to lirelliform ascomata, hyaline to brown single-septum spores, and association with a trentepohlioid green algal photobiont .

Contents

Taxonomy

Melaspileaceae was described by William Watson in 1929, [3] but the name was seldom used because the type genus and its position were unclear. Eremithallales was circumscribed as a new order in 2008, and Eremithallus costaricensis was originally described as its sole member. [4] A multi-locus analysis in 2015 clarified the limits and placement of the group: Melaspileaceae is the single family of Eremithallales , and within it the authors included Melaspilea (in the strict sense) together with the rock-dwelling genus Encephalographa . In the same work, Eremithallaceae was placed in synonymy under Melaspileaceae, and Eremithallus was treated as a younger synonym of Melaspilea (with the new combination Melaspilea costaricensis ). The study also showed that many taxa formerly kept in Melaspileaceae actually fall in Asterinales . In that order, lichenicolous and saprobic lineages are intermixed, and family placement remains uncertain for several genera. Earlier results that had suggested an affinity of Eremithallales to Lichinales were not recovered; instead, Eremithallales clustered within Dothideomycetes. [1]

Description

Members of Melaspileaceae share a consistent suite of features reflecting their placement in Eremithallales . Thalli, when present, are thin and whitish, growing mainly on bark (corticolous) and associated with a trentepohlioid green-algal partner (genus Trentepohlia ). The fruiting bodies (ascomata) are small, dark, and usually rounded or short- lirelliform . They begin immersed in the substrate, then break through ( erumpent ) and finally become superficial, with a flat to slightly convex disc bordered by a low rim sometimes fringed by minute lobules of bark tissue. The exciple is dark reddish-brown and turns olive in potassium hydroxide solution (K+ olivaceous). The hymenium is non-amyloid, and the filaments between asci (paraphyses) are slender, sometimes branched or anastomosing but not swollen at the tips.

The spore-bearing cells (asci) are elongate-club-shaped ( clavate ) to nearly cylindrical, eight-spored, with a thickened apex and a distinct ocular chamber that shows no iodine reaction (I−, K/I−). Ascospores are smooth, ellipsoid, one-septate, hyaline when young and brown at maturity, usually constricted at the septum, and in some material surrounded by a gelatinous sheath that turns blue after KOH and iodine treatment (K/I+). [1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Ertz, Damien; Diederich, Paul (2015). "Dismantling Melaspileaceae: a first phylogenetic study of Buelliella, Hemigrapha, Karschia, Labrocarpon and Melaspilea". Fungal Diversity. 71 (1): 141–164. doi:10.1007/s13225-015-0321-1.
  2. "Melaspileaceae". Catalogue of Life . Species 2000: Leiden, the Netherlands. Retrieved 28 October 2025.
  3. Watson, W. (1929). "The classification of lichens. II". New Phytologist. 28: 85–116 [94]. doi:10.1111/j.1469-8137.1929.tb06749.x.
  4. Nelsen, M.P.; Lücking, R.; Grube, M.; Mbatchou, J.S.; Muggia, L.; Plata, E. Rivas; Lumbsch, H.T. (2009). "Unravelling the phylogenetic relationships of lichenised fungi in Dothideomyceta". Studies in Mycology. 64: 135–144. doi:10.3114/sim.2009.64.07. PMC   2816970 . PMID   20169027.