In 2013, a proposal supported by
molecular phylogenetics data was made to
conserve the genus
Leptogium with a conserved
type, aiming to maintain the current broader classification including both small- and larger
foliose species within
Leptogium, while segregating the smaller squamulose species into
Scytinium. This conservation was recommended by a vote of 14-0-1 to prevent the necessity of reclassifying about 100 species into new genera such as
Malotium. The proposal was widely supported by the
Nomenclature Committee for Fungi as it simplifies the taxonomy and maintains historical continuity for the genus
Leptogium. A broad molecular re-assessment of the jelly lichens (Collemataceae) showed that the long-used genera
Collema and
Leptogium were not each
monophyletic. Using four DNA
markers, the authors recovered ten well-supported
lineages and, to align names with both molecules and
morphology, they treated those lineages as genera. In that framework
Leptogium is re-circumscribed to the clade formed by “B+C” in their trees, the group that includes
Leptogium azureum—the conserved
type species designated by Jørgensen and colleagues—so that the name
Leptogium covers a coherent lineage. They also showed that a "true cortex" (a proper eucortex) has evolved several times, so cortex alone cannot define genera; instead, the revised classification combines molecular evidence with traits such as habitat, thallus size and anatomy, and spore type. In this modern sense,
Leptogium comprises the large, foliose, eucorticate jelly lichens, typically with more than a few millimetres wide that can interconnect and swell conspicuously when wet, and it is mainly
epiphytic (growing on bark) in wet
tropical and humid
temperate regions. The authors formalised this usage by listing
Leptogium azureum as type, and by treating several historic names as
synonyms, including
Collema sect.
Mallotium (≡
Mallotium),
Leptogiopsis, and
Colleptogium. They contrasted
Leptogium with
Scytinium, which contains smaller species (often with a rather than a true cortex), more frequently on soil, mosses, or rock, and centred in temperate regions. ==Description==