History The family was described in 1897 by the Swedish botanist and
mycologist Hans Oscar Juel to accommodate species of fungi producing
basidiocarps (fruit bodies) having distinctive
basidia with grossly swollen
sterigmata. He included two
genera:
Tulasnella itself and the
poroid genus
Muciporus (the latter subsequently found to be no more than
Tulasnella species growing over the surface of old polypores). In 1900, the French mycologist
Narcisse Patouillard included the Tulasnellaceae within the heterobasidiomycetes or "
jelly fungi" and in 1922 British mycologist
Carleton Rea placed the family in its own order, the
Tulasnellales, within the heterobasidiomycetes.
Current status Molecular research, based on
cladistic analysis of
DNA sequences, has confirmed the Tulasnellaceae as distinct, but has placed the family within the
Cantharellales, close to the
Ceratobasidiaceae. A standard 2008 reference work estimated that the family contains three genera and over 50 species. ==Description==