Trechispora
| Trechispora | |
|---|---|
 
 | |
| Trechispora stevensonii | |
| Scientific classification  | |
| Kingdom: | Fungi | 
| Division: | Basidiomycota | 
| Class: | Agaricomycetes | 
| Order: | Trechisporales | 
| Family: | Hydnodontaceae | 
| Genus: | P.Karst. (1890)  | 
| Type species | |
| Trechispora onusta P.Karst. (1890) 
 | |
| Synonyms | |
Trechispora is a genus of fungi in the family Hydnodontaceae. Basidiocarps (fruit bodies) are variously corticioid (effused, patch-forming) or clavarioid (branched and coral-like) with spore-bearing surfaces that are variously smooth to hydnoid or poroid. The genus occurs worldwide, though individual species may be localized. Around 50 species have been described to date.[1]
Taxonomy
Trechispora was introduced in 1890 by Finnish mycologist Petter Karsten to describe a fragile, effused fungus with a poroid hymenium and small, spiny basidiospores. His type and only species, T. onusta, is now known to be a synonym of the earlier name Polyporus hymenocystis (= Trechispora hymenocystis).[1] Additional species with a similar micromorphology have subsequently been added to the genus.
_Figure_1a.png)
The genus Scytinopogon was introduced by Rolf Singer in 1945 to accommodate tropical and subtropical fungi with clavarioid basidiocarps having flattened branches and producing small, spiny to warty basidiospores.[2] Molecular research, based on cladistic analysis of DNA sequences, has however shown that Scytinopogon species are nested within Trechispora [3][1] (which they resemble microscopically) and are consequently not a separate genus but are simply Trechispora species with clavarioid basidiocarps.[1]
Species
- Trechispora alnicola
 - Trechispora amianthina
 - Trechispora antipus
 - Trechispora araneosa
 - Trechispora bispora
 - Trechispora brasiliensis
 - Trechispora brassicicola
 - Trechispora byssinella
 - Trechispora canariensis
 - Trechispora candidissima
 - Trechispora caucasica
 - Trechispora chartacea
 - Trechispora clancularis
 - Trechispora cohaerens
 - Trechispora copiosa
 - Trechispora dimitica
 - Trechispora donkii
 - Trechispora elongata
 - Trechispora farinacea
 - Trechispora fastidiosa
 - Trechispora gelatinosa
 - Trechispora gillesii
 - Trechispora gloeospora
 - Trechispora granulifera
 - Trechispora havencampii
 - Trechispora hymenocystis
 - Trechispora incisa
 - Trechispora invisitata
 - Trechispora kavinioides
 - Trechispora laevis
 - Trechispora microspora
 - Trechispora minima
 - Trechispora minispora
 - Trechispora minuta
 - Trechispora mollusca
 - Trechispora mutabilis
 - Trechispora nivea
 - Trechispora pallescens
 - Trechispora papillosa
 - Trechispora petrophila
 - Trechispora polygonospora
 - Trechispora praefocata
 - Trechispora regularis
 - Trechispora rigida
 - Trechispora sphaerocystis
 - Trechispora sphaerospora
 - Trechispora stellulata
 - Trechispora stevensonii
 - Trechispora subhelvetica
 - Trechispora subsphaerospora
 - Trechispora tenuicula
 - Trechispora termitophila
 - Trechispora trigonospora
 - Trechispora variseptata
 - Trechispora verruculosa
 
References
- ^ a b c d de Meiras-Ottoni A, Larsson KH, Gibertoni TB (2021). "Additions to Trechispora and the status of Scytinopogon (Trechisporales, Basidiomycota)". Mycological Progress. 20: 203–222. doi:10.1007/s11557-021-01667-y.
 - ^ Singer R. (1945). "New genera of fungi". Lloydia. 8: 139–44.
 - ^ Birkebak JM, Mayor JR, Ryberg KM, Matheny PB (2013). "A systematic, morphological and ecological overview of the Clavariaceae (Agaricales)" (PDF). Mycologia. 105 (4): 896–911. doi:10.3852/12-070. PMID 23396156. S2CID 27083890. 
 
