The term was originally defined by
Christiaan Hendrik Persoon as a
section of the genus
Merulius in 1801. British botanist
Samuel Frederick Gray raised it to genus status in his 1821 work
The Natural Arrangement of British Plants. The name is derived from the
Latin verb
serpěre "to creep". Synonyms include
Johann Heinrich Friedrich Link's 1809
Xylophagous,
Christian Hendrik Persoon's 1825
Xylomyzon,
Narcisse Théophile Patouillard's 1874
Gyrophora, and Patouillard's 1897
Gyrophana.
Serpula forms a
clade with at least two other closely related genera,
Austropaxillus and
Gymnopaxillus, the three composing the family
Serpulaceae. It is thought that the common ancestor was
saprotrophic, and that ancestor to the latter two genera became
mycorrhizal. Using
molecular clock analysis, the split between
Austropaxillus and
Serpula has been estimated to have occurred about 34.9
mya, roughly coinciding with the separation of South America and Australia from Antarctica. The number of species is uncertain – the two species
S. lacrymans and
S. himantioides have been considered to be a single species, or the latter species has possibly five
cryptic species within its complex. ==Description==