Dacrymycetales | |
---|---|
Calocera viscosa on conifer wood | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Fungi |
Division: | Basidiomycota |
Subdivision: | Agaricomycotina |
Class: | Dacrymycetes Doweld (2001)[2] |
Order: | Dacrymycetales Henn. (1898)[1] |
Families | |
Cerinomycetaceae |
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".
Engler1898
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).Doweld2001
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).Zamora2020
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).Gill1987
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).