The genus was created to accommodate a species first
described by
William Nylander in 1868 as
Xylographa platytropa, based on Finnish material collected on wood; Nylander provided a full Latin and measurements for the species.
Edvard Vainio subsequently proposed the segregate genus
Xyloschistes in 1883 and made the
new combination Xyloschistes platytropa for Nylander's species. However, as currently interpreted by
Index Fungorum, Vainio's generic name was not
validly published under the
botanical code (Art. 38.1(a), Shenzhen Code).
Alexander Zahlbruckner later published the genus validly in 1903 as
Xyloschistes Vain. ex Zahlbr. in Engler & Prantl's "
Die natürlichen Pflanzenfamilien". Zahlbruckner did not indicate a
type at publication; Clements and Shear (1931) subsequently designated
Xyloschistes platytropa as the type species. Modern multigene analyses place
Xyloschistes within the family
Stictidaceae and clarify its nearest relatives. A family-wide three-marker study (
mtSSU+
LSU+
ITS) recovered
X. platytropa as a distinct lineage in Stictidaceae, adjacent to the lichenised genus
Ingvariella and close to
Geisleria;
ancestral-state reconstructions in the same work code
Xyloschistes as
saprotrophic. A later analysis using concatenated mtSSU+LSU data (with ITS analysed separately) likewise placed
Xyloschistes with
Ingvariella and
Cryptodiscus, with the newly segregated
Absconditella resolved as the
sister lineage. Stictidaceae, as presently circumscribed, contains both lichenised and non-lichenised
lineages, a mix that accords with the classic concept of
Xyloschistes. ==Description==