The genus was first described by
Bernhard Auerswald in 1869, to accommodate the species then known as
Peziza macrocalyx.
Sarcosphaera coronaria was originally named
Peziza coronaria by the Dutch scientist
Nikolaus Joseph von Jacquin in 1778, and underwent several name changes before being assigned its current name in 1908 by
Joseph Schröter. Several
taxa have been named as belonging to the genus
Sarcosphaera over the years, but most lack modern descriptions and have not been reported since their original collections. For example,
Sarcosphaera funerata was renamed by
Fred Jay Seaver in 1930 based on the
basionym Peziza funerata, originally described by Cooke in 1878.
Sarcosphaera gigantea was a species collected from
Michigan, originally described as
Pustularia gigantea by
Heinrich Rehm in 1905, and correctly considered distinct from
S. coronaria on the basis of its smaller spore size.
Sarcosphaera ulbrichiana was described by
Wilhelm Kirschstein in 1943. Other taxa have been reduced to
synonymy with
S. coronaria, or transferred to other genera.
Sarcosphaera eximia (originally
Peziza eximia Durieu &
Lév. 1848, and later transferred to
Sarcosphaera by
René Maire),
Sarcosphaera crassa (considered by
Zdeněk Pouzar in a 1972 publication to be the correct name for
S. coronaria) and
Sarcosphaera dargelasii (originally
Peziza dargelasii Gachet 1829, transferred to
Sarcosphaera by
Nannfeldt) used to be considered synonyms of
S. coronaria.
Sarcosphaera ammophila (originally
Peziza ammophila Durieu & Mont.) and
Sarcosphaera amplissima (originally
Peziza amplissima Fr. 1849) have since been transferred back to
Peziza. The 10th edition of the
Dictionary of the Fungi (2008) considers
Sarcosphaera to be
monotypic, and
Index Fungorum has only
Sarcosphaera coronaria confirmed as valid. In 1947,
Helen Gilkey described the genus
Caulocarpa based on a single collection made in
Wallowa County, Oregon. The
type species,
C. montana, was thought to be a
truffle (formerly classified in the now-defunct Tuberales order) because of its chambered fruit body and subterranean growth habit. It was later noted by mycologist James Trappe to strongly resemble
Sarcosphaera. Thirty years later, Trappe revisited the original collection site in eastern Oregon and found fresh specimens that closely matched Gilkey's original description. Some specimens, however, had opened up similar to
Sarcosphaera, suggesting that the original specimens had "simply not emerged and often not opened due to habitat factors." Microscopic examination of the preserved type material revealed the species to be
Sarcosphaera coronaria (then called
S. crassa), and
Caulocarpa is now considered a generic synonym of
Sarcosphaera.
Sarcosphaera is
classified in the family
Pezizaceae of the order
Pezizales.
Phylogenetic analysis of
ribosomal DNA sequences suggests that
Sarcosphaera forms a
clade with the genera
Boudiera and
Iodophanus, and that the three taxa are a sister group to
Ascobolus and
Saccobolus (both in the family
Ascobolaceae). Species in the families Pezizaceae and Ascobolaceae are distinct from other Pezizalean taxa in the positive iodine reaction of the
ascus wall. In a more recent (2005) phylogenetic analysis combining the data derived from three genes (the large subunit
ribosomal rRNA (LSU),
RNA polymerase II (RPB2), and beta-
tubulin),
Sarcosphaera was shown to be closely related to the truffle genus
Hydnotryopsis, corroborating earlier results that used only the LSU rDNA sequences.
Etymology The Greek genus name means "flesh ball"; the Latin
specific epithet,
coronaria, refers to the crown-like form of the open fruit body. The species is
commonly known by various names, including the "crown fungus", the "pink crown", the "violet crown-cup", or the "violet star cup". ==Description==