• Source: Irpicaceae
  • The Irpicaceae are a family of mostly polypores and crust fungi in the order Polyporales.


    Taxonomy


    The family was circumscribed in 2003 by mycologists Viacheslav Spirin and Ivan Zmitrovich. The type genus is Irpex. Later multi-gene phylogenetic analyses of the Polyporales supported the use of this family. In these analyses, Irpicaceae is a sister taxon to the Meruliaceae; these two families, as well as the Phanerochaetaceae, form the phlebioid clade.


    Description


    Irpicaceae has both polypore and crust fungi. They have a monomitic hyphal system, containing only generative hyphae that do not have clamp connections. Their spores are thin-walled, smooth, and translucent. Cystidia are often absent from the hymenium. More rarely, some species are dimitic and/or with cystidia and/or clamp-connections present; for example, Emmia and Irpex have cystidia, and there are clamp connections in Gloeoporus. Irpicaceae fungi produce a white-rot, except for one brown-rot genus (Leptoporus).


    Genera


    Byssomerulius Parmasto (1967) – 9 species
    Ceriporia Donk (1933) – 57 species
    Efibula Sheng H.Wu (1990) – 16 species
    Emmia Zmitr., Spirin & Malysheva (2006)
    Flavodon Ryvarden (1973) – 3 species
    Gloeoporus Mont. (1842) – 32 species
    Hydnopolyporus D.A.Reid (1962) – 2 species
    Leptoporus Quél. (1886) – 12 species
    Meruliopsis Bondartsev (1959) – 2 species
    Trametopsis Tomšovský (2008) – 3 species
    According to Justo and colleagues, several genera from various other Polyporales families contain species that should be in the Irpicaceae, and will need to be reclassified. These include: Candelabrochaete (C. langloisii and C. septocystidia), Ceraceomyces (C. eludens, C. microsporus, and C. serpens), Ceriporia (C. lacerata), Ceriporiopsis (C. aneirina and C. resinascens), Hapalopilus (H. ochraceolateritius), Phanerochaete (P. allantospora, P. angustocystidiata, P. exilis, P. ginnsii, P. intertexta, P. leptoderma, and P. xerophila), and Phlebia (P. albida, P. albomellea, and P. nitidula.


    References

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