The species was first described in 1911 by Italian mycologist
Pier Andrea Saccardo, based on a specimen collected by
Peter Henry Rolfs, sent by John A. Stevenson at the US national mycological collection. Rolfs first considered the unnamed fungus to be the cause of
tomato blight in
Florida and subsequently caused diseases on multiple hosts. The specimens sent to Saccardo were sterile, consisting of
hyphae and
sclerotia. Saccardo placed the species in the old
form genus Sclerotium, naming it
Sclerotium rolfsii. It is, however, not a species of
Sclerotium in the modern sense. In 1932,
Mario Curzi discovered that the
teleomorph (spore-bearing state) was a
corticioid fungus and accordingly placed the species in the
genus Corticium. Uncertainty on its classification when the broadly defined genus
Corticium was being partitioned by taxonomists, led to placement in
Pellicularia, then
Botryobasidium and finally
Athelia. Subsequently, it has been shown via phylogenetic analyses of DNA sequences, that
Agroathelia rolfsii was a member of the
Amylocorticiales and not the
Atheliales where it was classified until recently. == Description ==