Taxonomy The family was proposed by the Swedish botanist
Carl Adolph Agardh in 1821. While Agardh initially classified it as an "ordo" (order), he used it in a way that suggested a family ranking, referring to it as "Ramalineae". According to the nomenclatural authority
Index Fungorum, while Agardh initially classified it as an "ordo" (order), he used it in a way that suggested a family ranking, referring to it as "Ramalineae". The first explicit use of Ramalinaceae as a family name came from
Antoine Laurent Apollinaire Fée in 1824, but this was not considered
valid under Article 32.1(b) of the nomenclature rules, meaning it was not accompanied by a description or or a reference to a previously published description or diagnosis. The first correctly spelled use of the family name Ramalinaceae in accordance with Article 18.4 (i.e., with the ending -
aceae) is attributed to
Watson in a 1929 publication. Early taxonomists proposed various classification schemes for the family.
William Nylander (1870) subdivided it based on internal thallus structures, while
Edvard Vainio (1890) emphasized the anatomical structure of the cortex and established sections including
Fistularia and
Myelopoea. Later,
Gustaf Einar Du Rietz (1926) treated the old genera
Desmazieria and
Euramalina as
subgenera under
Ramalina, further dividing them into
sections and subsections based on thallus anatomy. However, none of these classification schemes gained full acceptance among modern-day taxonomists. In 2018, Sonja Kistenich and colleagues published a large-scale
molecular phylogenetic analysis of the family. The study demonstrated five well‐supported
clades in the Ramalinaceae; they are named after the largest genera within them, viz. the
Bacidia-,
Biatora‐,
Ramalina‐,
Rolfidium‐, and
Toninia‐groups. The genera
Bacidia,
Phyllopsora,
Physcidia and
Toninia were found to be polyphyletic and split into segregates. The study also traced the
character evolution of the morphological and ecological nature of the Ramalinaceae ancestor. The ancestor probably arose from moist,
temperate forests growing on the bark of trees with a crustose growth form and reproduced mainly by forming apothecia and long, multi-septate spores. A 2020 study by Richard Spjut and colleagues provided further insights into the taxonomy of Ramalinaceae, particularly focusing on the fruticose genera. The research revealed that the fruticose genera within Ramalinaceae are not
monophyletic (derived from a single ancestor) but form two distinct
lineages: 1)
Ramalina +
Namibialina and 2)
Vermilacinia +
Niebla. These lineages are nested within accessions of the crustose genus
Cliostomum. The divergence between these two main lineages occurred approximately 48 million years ago.
Ramalina began to spread worldwide around 43 million years ago, whilst its
sister genus
Namibialina, newly described in this study,
radiated later (about 19–20 million years ago) in the
coastal deserts of southwest Africa.
Vermilacinia and
Niebla, which diverged around 30 million years ago, are primarily found in coastal deserts of the New World. The study highlighted challenges in delimiting species boundaries within
Niebla and
Vermilacinia, indicating that more data are required for a comprehensive understanding. Notably, the taxonomy proposed by Spjut (1996) for
Niebla was not fully corroborated by molecular data, whereas that for saxicolous
Vermilacinia received substantial support. The research also led to the description of new
Vermilacinia species. Regarding the genus
Ramalina, the study examined 50 identified species out of an estimated total of 230. Species lacking
secondary metabolites (except
usnic acid) were resolved at the base of the
phylogenetic tree but did not form a monophyletic group. Some clades corresponded to the production of specific secondary metabolites, although these were not always
autapomorphies. The study also resulted in the recognition or resurrection of several
Ramalina species, including
R. krogiae and
R. lusitanica.
Synonymy Some genera now classified in the Ramalinaceae were considered by past authors to be distinctive enough to warrant inclusion in their own family. These historical family names are considered
synonymous with Ramalinaceae: • Bacidiaceae • Biatoraceae • Catinariaceae • Crocyniaceae • Lecaniaceae • Megalariaceae • Phyllopsoraceae
Etymology As is
standard practice in
botanical nomenclature, the name Ramalinaceae is based on the name of the
type genus,
Ramalina, with the ending indicating the
rank of family. The genus name, assigned by the mycologist
Erik Acharius in 1809, comprises the
Latin word meaning and , meaning , and -
ina, a
suffix that denotes similarity. It refers to the typically fruticose, highly branched thalli characteristic of many
Ramalina species. ==Description==