History Tremella was one of the original genera created by
Linnaeus in his
Species Plantarum of 1753. The name comes from the
Latin tremere meaning "to tremble". Linnaeus placed
Tremella in the
algae, including within it a variety of gelatinous growths, including
seaweeds,
cyanobacteria, and
myxomycetes, as well as fungi. Subsequent authors added additional species to this mix, until
Persoon revised
Tremella in 1794 and 1801, repositioning the genus within the fungi. Persoon's reinterpretation of
Tremella was sufficiently radical to be considered a separate genus (
Tremella Pers.) from that originally created by Linnaeus (
Tremella L.).
Tremella Pers. has now been conserved under the
International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants, with
Tremella mesenterica as the
type species.
Current status Molecular research, based on
cladistic analysis of
DNA sequences, has shown that
Tremella (as previously understood) is
polyphyletic (and hence artificial), with most species not closely related to the
type. Accordingly, some species have been transferred to new genera and new families:
Tremella foliacea and related species are now placed in the genus
Phaeotremella within the family
Phaeotremellaceae;
Tremella encephala and related species are now placed in the genus
Naematelia within the
Naemateliaceae;
Tremella moriformis and related species are now placed in the genus
Pseudotremella within the
Bulleraceae; and
Tremella polyporina is now placed in the genus
Carcinomyces within the
Carcinomycetaceae. Several other species groups have not yet been renamed, pending further research. More than 500 species have been described in
Tremella, but most of these are old names either of doubtful application or for species later transferred to other genera. In its strict sense the genus
Tremella now contains some 30-40 species, including the type
Tremella mesenterica and the cultivated species
T. fuciformis. ==Description==