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Dacrymycetales

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Dacrymycetales
Calocera viscosa on conifer wood
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Subdivision: Agaricomycotina
Class: Dacrymycetes
Doweld (2001)[2]
Order: Dacrymycetales
Henn. (1898)[1]
Families

Cerinomycetaceae
Dacrymycetaceae
Dacryonaemataceae
Unilacrymaceae

The Dacrymycetes are a class of fungi in the Basidiomycota. The class currently contains the single order Dacrymycetales, with a second proposed order Unilacrymales now treated at the family level.[3] The order contains four families and has a cosmopolitan distribution.

All fungi in the Dacrymycetes are wood-rotting saprotrophs. Basidiocarps (fruit bodies) are ceraceous to gelatinous, typically yellow to orange as a result of carotenoid pigments,[4] and variously corticioid (effused and patch-forming), disc- or cushion-shaped, spathulate, or clavarioid (club or coral-like). Microscopically, nearly all species have distinctive Y-shaped holobasidia.[3]

Species were formerly placed in the Heterobasidiomycetes and are informally included in the "jelly fungi".

References

  1. ^ Engler A; Prantl K.A.E, eds. (1898). Nat. Pflanzenfam. 1. p. 96. (as "Dacromycetineae")
  2. ^ Doweld A (2001). Prosyllabus tracheophytorum : tentamen systematis plantarum vascularium (Tracheophyta). Moscow, Russia: GEOS. ISBN 978-5-89118-283-7.
  3. ^ a b Zamora JC, Ekman S (2020). "Phylogeny and character evolution in the Dacrymycetes, and systematics of Unilacrymaceae and Dacryonaemataceae fam. nov". Persoonia. 44: 161–205. doi:10.3767/persoonia.2020.44.07.
  4. ^ Gill M, Steglich W (1987). "Pigments of fungi. Macromycetes". Fortschritte der Chemie organischer Naturstoffe. 51: 1–317.