The genus was established by the Finnish lichenologist
William Nylander in 1857. In his original description, Nylander characterized
Melaspilea as having a thin or inconspicuous thallus and a black
apothecium with a superficial or simple that is often convex. The genus was distinguished by its discrete
paraphyses, ovoid to somewhat uncoloured single
septum spores measuring 8
micrometres, and lack of a
hymenial gelatin. The
type species,
M. arthonioides, was described from specimens collected on ash trees (
Fraxinus) near
Philippeville, Algeria. Nylander noted that while the species was rare in France, particularly on elm trees, it was not truly found there in a well-developed state. He also described a second species,
M. deformis, characterized by its reduced thallus, small or medium-sized rounded or deformed apothecium, and occurrence on oak, walnut, and ash trees in Switzerland. For much of its history, names placed in
Melaspilea formed a heterogeneous assemblage with uncertain rank and placement; different authors treated parts of the group in
Arthoniomycetes,
Graphidales,
Patellariaceae and Buelliaceae, or as
lichenicolous outliers, reflecting the lack of a stable circumscription. A multi-
locus phylogenetic study in 2015 dismantled the broad, traditional concept of the genus and family. It showed that
Melaspilea (in the broad sense) is
polyphyletic:
Melaspilea in the strict sense belongs in the order
Eremithallales within
Dothideomycetes, together with the rock-dwelling genus
Encephalographa;
Eremithallaceae is treated as a synonym of
Melaspileaceae. In the same work, the authors subsumed
Eremithallus into
Melaspilea and made the new combinations
Melaspilea costaricensis,
Melaspilea enteroleuca and
Melaspilea urceolata. Many other species historically assigned to
Melaspilea were shown to belong in
Asterinales and are best treated in segregate genera such as
Melaspileella,
Melaspileopsis and
Stictographa. The revised framework reflects that superficially similar dark, 1-septate ascomata have evolved repeatedly in unrelated lineages, and that lichenised and lichenicolous lifestyles are intermingled within Asterinales. ==Description==