In 1768, German botanist
Johann Gerhard König, a pupil of
Carl Linnaeus, visited
Cape Town on his way to India and made several
collections of lichen species. Among these was the
type collection of
Lichen chrysophtalmos, now known as
Teloschistes chrysophthalmos, which was first
formally described by Linnaeus in 1771.
Theodor Magnus Fries transferred the
taxon to the genus
Teloschistes in 1861, and it has been largely known by this name for more than 150 years. In 2013,
Sergey Kondratyuk and colleagues proposed to resurrect
Niorma, a genus originally proposed by
Abramo Bartolommeo Massalongo in 1861. The new version of the genus is to contain the
species complex centred around
Teloschistes hypoglaucus, a group that includes
T. chrysophthalmos. However, the use of the genus has not been universally accepted by contemporary lichenologists. In a 2021 research paper, Wilk and colleagues suggest that "
Teloschistes forms a genetically diverse but strongly supported clade", and they prefer to use the older classification proposed by Arup et al. in 2013 until more data are available. ==Habitat and distribution==