Taedigera was erected in 2024 by Ulrik Søchting and Ulf Arup during their revision of the twig-dwelling
teloschistoid lichens formerly placed in an expanded
Marchantiana. Multi-gene
molecular analyses showed that "Marchantiana
sensu lato" actually comprises two well-supported
clades separated by
Yoshimuria; the Australian clade retains the name
Marchantiana (with
M. occidentalis as
type species), whereas the southern South American–New Zealand clade was segregated as
Taedigera. The authors also note that earlier concepts of
Marchantiana were muddled by misidentified
DNA sequences, which this study corrects with new sequencing of
type material. The genus was published with
Taedigera epibrya as type (
new combination from
Caloplaca epibrya). In the same work, the authors recognised six species in
Taedigera: the new combinations
T. pyramus and
T. ramulicola (from
Marchantiana) and
T. subpyracea (from
Lecanora), plus two species described as new to science,
T. flammea and
T. gallowayi. The formal characterises
Taedigera as a group of small, twig-dwelling crusts with tiny apothecia (with a ) and spores. Chemically, the genus is defined by
anthraquinone chemosyndromes dominated by
parietin (Type A) or by
emodin (Types E and E3), the latter uncommon in Teloschistaceae and used here (together with the molecular evidence) to separate
Taedigera from
Marchantiana, which also features chlorinated anthraquinones such as (neo)chloroemodin. The name
Taedigera () refers to the flame-coloured typical of the genus. By contrast, the allied
Yoshimuria (East Asia) has well-developed
rock-dwelling thalli and larger apothecia. ==Description==