German naturalist
Jacob Christian Schäffer described
Elvela (subsequently
Helvella)
purpurascens in 1774. Austrian naturalist
Franz Xaver von Wulfen gave it the name
Clavaria elveloides in 1781, reporting that it appeared in the
fir tree forests around
Klagenfurt in August and was common around
Hüttenberg. He recorded that poor people ate it, giving it the local name ''hare's ear
. In 1796, mycologist Christian Hendrik Persoon described G. clavatus
as Merulius clavatus
, noting that it grew in grassy locations in woods. He noted it was the same species that Schäffer had described. The specific epithet—derived from the Latin word clava
(club) and meaning "club-shaped"—refers to the shape of young fruit bodies. In his 1801 Synopsis methodica fungorum
, Persoon placed Merulius clavatus
(recognising two varieties—violaceus
and spadiceus
) in the section Gomphus
within Merulius''. British botanist
Samuel Frederick Gray used Persoon's name, transferring the violet chanterelle to the genus
Gomphus in 1821. As it was the first named member of the genus it became the
type species. The starting date of fungal
taxonomy had been set as January 1, 1821, to coincide with the date of the works of Swedish naturalist
Elias Magnus Fries, which meant the name required
sanction by Fries (indicated in the name by a colon) to be considered valid. Thus the species was written as
Gomphus clavatus (Pers.: Fr.) Gray. A 1987 revision of the
International Code of Botanical Nomenclature set the starting date at May 1, 1753, the date of publication of the
Species Plantarum, by
Carl Linnaeus. Hence, the name no longer requires the ratification of Fries' authority. Persoon followed suit in treating
Gomphus as a separate genus in his 1825 work
Mycologia Europaea. Here he recognized
M. clavatus as the same species as
Clavaria truncata described by
Casimir Christoph Schmidel in 1796, calling the taxon
Gomphus truncatus. Fries himself declined to keep the genus separate, instead classifying
Gomphus as a
tribus (
subgenus) within the genus
Cantharellus in his 1821 work
Systema Mycologicum, the species becoming
Cantharellus clavatus. He recognized four varieties:
violaceo-spadiceus,
carneus,
purpurascens and
umbrinus. Swiss mycologist
Louis Secretan described three
taxa—
Merulius clavatus carneus,
M. clavatus violaceus and
M. clavatus purpurascens—in his 1833 work
Mycographie Suisse. Many of his names have been rejected for
nomenclatural purposes because Secretan had a narrow
species concept, dividing many taxa into multiple species that were not supported by other authorities, and his works did not use
binomial nomenclature consistently. Fries revised his classification in his 1838 book
Epicrisis Systematis Mycologici seu Synopsis Hymenomycetum, placing it in a
series—
Deformes—in the genus
Craterellus.
Paul Kummer raised many of Fries'
tribus (subgenera; not
tribes) to genus rank in his 1871 work
Der Führer in die Pilzkunde, classifying the violet chanterelle in the genus
Thelephora. Jacques Emile Doassans and
Narcisse Théophile Patouillard placed it in the genus
Neurophyllum (also spelt
Nevrophyllum) in 1886, removing it from
Cantharellus on account of its orange spores.
Charles Horton Peck discarded the name in 1887 and returned
G. clavatus to
Cantharellus. In 1891, German botanist
Otto Kuntze published
Revisio generum plantarum, his response to what he perceived as poor method in existing nomenclatural practice. He coined the genus
Trombetta to incorporate the violet chanterelle, hence giving it the name
Trombetta clavata. However, Kuntze's revisionary program was not accepted by the majority of botanists.
Alexander H. Smith treated
Gomphus as a section within
Cantharellus in his 1947 review of chanterelles in western North America, as he felt there were no consistent characteristics that distinguished the two genera. In 1966
E. J. H. Corner described a small-spored variety,
G. clavatus var.
parvispora, from specimens collected in
Uganda; it is not considered to have independent
taxonomic significance. Research in the early 2000s combining the use of
phylogenetic analyses of DNA sequences and more traditional
morphology-based characters has resulted in a reshuffling of the species concept in
Gomphus; as a result,
G. clavatus is considered the only
Gomphus species in North America. Comparison of the
DNA sequences of species
Gomphus brevipes and
G. truncatus has shown them to be genetically identical to
G. clavatus, and they may be treated as
synonyms.
Gomphus clavatus is commonly known as pig's ears, alluding to the violet underside and yellowish
cap of the
fruit bodies, although this vernacular name is also used for
Discina perlata. Other English
common names for this species include clustered chanterelle and violet chanterelle. Gray coined the name clubbed gomphe. In the
Sherpa language of Nepal the fungus is known as
Eeshyamo ("mother-in-law"), as its imposing fruit body is reminiscent of a mother-in-law, who has a dominant role in a
Sherpa family. ==Description==