Rhodocybe is a genus of fungi in the family Entolomataceae. Basidiocarps (fruit bodies) are agaricoid (gilled mushrooms) producing pink basidiospores that are unevenly roughened or pustular under the microscope. Species are saprotrophic and mostly grow on the ground, occasionally on wood. The genus is distributed worldwide.

Rhodocybe
Rhodocybe gemina
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Agaricales
Family: Entolomataceae
Genus: Rhodocybe
Maire (1926)
Type species
Rhodocybe caelata
(Fr.) Maire (1926)
Species

Rhodocybe alutacea
Rhodocybe ardosiaca
Rhodocybe asanii
Rhodocybe asyae
Rhodocybe brunnea
Rhodocybe caelata
Rhodocybe cistetorum
Rhodocybe collybioides
Rhodocybe dominicana
Rhodocybe formosa
Rhodocybe fuliginea
Rhodocybe fumanellii
Rhodocybe fusipes
Rhodocybe gemina
Rhodocybe griseoaurantia
Rhodocybe griseonigrella
Rhodocybe incarnata
Rhodocybe lateritia
Rhodocybe luteocinnamomea
Rhodocybe matesina
Rhodocybe mellea
Rhodocybe pakistanica
Rhodocybe pallidogrisea
Rhodocybe paurii
Rhodocybe pseudoalutacea
Rhodocybe roseiavellanea
Rhodocybe rhizogena
Rhodocybe stipitata
Rhodocybe subasyae
Rhodocybe tugrulii

Taxonomy

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The genus was originally described in 1926 by French mycologist René Maire to accommodate agarics with pink spores that were roughened but not angular (as in the genus Entoloma). In 2009, as a result of molecular research, based on cladistic analysis of DNA sequences, CoDavid et al. found that Clitopilus species form a clade nested within Rhodocybe species and proposed that these genera should be merged so that the new combined genus (called Clitopilus since it is the earlier name) would be monophyletic (a natural group).[1] Additional research, however, showed that the core groupings of Clitopilus and Rhodocybe were both monophyletic, if outlying species were moved to new genera (Rhodophana, Clitocella, and Clitopilopsis).[2] This disposition has been accepted by subsequent authors.[3][4][5][6]

In this revised sense, the genus remains essentially the same except that Rhodocybe nitellina and associated species are now placed in Rhodophana and Rhodocybe popinalis, R. mundula, and associated species are now placed in Clitocella.[2][3]

Description

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Rhodocybe species produce agaricoid fruit bodies of various colours with a pleurotoid, collybioid, mycenoid, clitocyboid, or tricholomatoid habit. The attachment of lamellae ranges from adnexed to subdecurrent. The stipes (stems) are smooth and lack an annulus (ring). The spore print is pink. Microscopically, basidiospores have pronounced undulate-pustulate ornamentations, cystidia are mostly present, and clamp connections are absent.[2]

References

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  1. ^ D. Co-David; D. Langeveld; M.E. Noordeloos (Nov 2009). "Molecular phylogeny and spore evolution of Entolomataceae" (PDF). Persoonia. 23 (2): 147–176. doi:10.3767/003158509x480944. PMC 2802732. PMID 20198166. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-27.
  2. ^ a b c Kluting KL, Baroni TJ, Bergemann SE (2014). "Toward a stable classification of genera within the Entolomataceae: a phylogenetic re-evaluation of the Rhodocybe-Clitopilus clade". Mycologia. 106 (6): 1127–42. doi:10.3852/13-270. PMID 24987124. S2CID 40696041.
  3. ^ a b Vizzini A, Picillo B, Ercole E, Vila J, Contu M (2016). "Rhodocybe formosa (Agaricales, Entolomataceae): new collections, molecular data and synonymy, and Rhodocybe griseonigrella comb. nov". Phytotaxa. 255: 34–46. doi:10.11646/phytotaxa.255.1.3.
  4. ^ Sesli E (2021). "Rhodocybe cistetorum (Basidiomycota, Entolomataceae), a new species from the Colchic ecoregion of Turkey". Nordic Journal of Botany. 39 (4). doi:10.1111/njb.03078.
  5. ^ Mao N, Lv J, Xu Y, Zhao T, Fan L (2022). "Two new Clitocella species from North China revealed by phylogenetic analyses and morphological characters" (PDF). MycoKeys (88): 151–170. doi:10.3897/mycokeys.88.80068.
  6. ^ Sun Y, Bau T (2023). "Rhodocybe subasyae, a new species of Rhodocybe sect. Rufobrunnea (Entolomataceae, Agaricales) from northeast China". Mycoscience. 64 (3): 96–00. doi:10.47371/mycosci.2023.03.001. PMC 10308067. PMID 37397609.