Thelopsis was
circumscribed by the Finnish lichenologist
William Nylander in 1855, with
Thelopsis rubella as the
type species. It is a small, cosmopolitan genus of crustose lichens characterised by globose, semi-gelatinous perithecia with short, stiff periphyses; polysporous asci that
stain blue in iodine; and small, transversely septate to sub-muriform, colourless ascospores. Early authors placed the genus in the family
Stictidaceae.
Antonín Vězda's 1968 revision treated just six species and suggested links to
Ramonia. Subsequent authors noted additional
morphological affinities with
Topelia;
Per Magnus Jørgensen and Vězda even considered moving the genus to the
Gyalectales because of features shared with
Belonia, although they retained it in the
Ostropales at that time. A multigene
phylogeny published in 2021 delivered the first
molecular appraisal of these relationships. The analysis showed that the
type species T. rubella, along with
T. byssoidea and the sterile taxon
Opegrapha corticola, forms a strongly supported
clade embedded in
Gyalecta sensu lato, whereas
T. melathelia resolves as sister to
Ramonia valenzueliana. To align the taxonomy with these results,
O. corticola was recombined as
T. corticola, and
T. melathelia was transferred to
Ramonia. After these adjustments,
Thelopsis sensu stricto—the three remaining species—constitutes a well-supported
monophyletic group. Because this trio also shares distinctive morphological traits, the authors kept
Thelopsis as a separate genus pending broader sampling to clarify the limits of
Gyalecta. Although early authors aligned
Thelopsis with the Stictidaceae, multi-gene analyses by Ertz and colleagues (2021) showed that the three core species—
T. rubella,
T. byssoidea and the newly recombined
T. corticola—form a strongly supported clade embedded in the family
Gyalectaceae, not Stictidaceae. Building on these results, Cannon and colleagues (2024) adopt a narrower circumscription of
Gyalecta that retains well-known genera such as
Belonia,
Cryptolechia and
Pachyphiale and explicitly recognises the perithecial
Thelopsis as a monophyletic
lineage nested within the broader
Gyalecta complex; they note that discarding the genus would render
Gyalecta paraphyletic unless the latter were split into several segregate genera. Accordingly, their current treatment places
Thelopsis as a distinct but closely allied genus within the Gyalectaceae. ==Description==