A
multilocus (three-gene)
phylogeny of the Lobariaceae (then treated as a
family; now the subfamily Lobarioideae within
Peltigeraceae) that was published in 2013 resolved
Pseudocyphellaria in the loose sense into four well-supported
lineages that the authors consider better treated as separate, morphochemically coherent genera. Within that framework, the
clade centred on
Pseudocyphellaria endochrysa corresponds to the genus
Podostictina, which was originally defined by
Frederic Edward Clements in 1909. The paper explicitly lists
Podostictina as the available genus-level name for this group, with the type
Podostictina endochrysoides (Müll.Arg.) Clem., which the authors equate to
Pseudocyphellaria compar (Nyl.) H.Magn. The study further noted that recognising these segregate genera is consistent with the distribution of key across the tree; in particular, the traditional concept of
Pseudocyphellaria in the loose sense is not supported as a single clade. As framed in this paper,
Podostictina represents the
endochrysa lineage within the
Pseudocyphellaria complex, whereas the other three lineages correspond to
Crocodia (the
aurata group),
Parmostictina (the
hirsuta group) and
Pseudocyphellaria in the strict sense (the
crocata group). More recent
phylogenomics using targeted capture of about 400 nuclear genes recovered
Podostictina as a distinct lineage within the Lobariaceae (now Lobarioideae in Peltigeraceae), but its exact position on the family backbone varied with data type and method. Concatenated
nucleotide analyses placed it
sister to the remaining Lobariaceae, whereas species tree and
amino acid analyses produced conflicting or weakly supported alternatives; the authors attribute this to extremely short internal branches and extensive gene tree discordance. Network analyses fitted the data better than strictly bifurcating trees and inferred reticulation among the pored-cortex genera, repeatedly implicating
Podostictina,
Sticta and
Yarrumia. A fossil-calibrated relaxed clock dated the
crown group of
Podostictina to about 29.5
million years ago (mya), with the family stem near 64 Mya. ==Description==