Geoglossum is a genus of fungi in the familyGeoglossaceae. They are commonly called earth tongues. The type species is Geoglossum glabrum. Geoglossum species are distinguished from the related genusTrichoglossum by the lack of setae on the spore bearing surface. Geoglossum species are characterized by dark, club-shaped, terrestrial ascocarps with a fertile hymenium continuing downward from the apex of the ascocarp along the stipe, eventually intergrading with a sterile stipe. The ascospores of Geoglossumrange from translucent to dark brown, and are, and multiseptate. Identification of species is based on the gross morphology of the ascocarp, color and septation of the ascospores, and shape and ornamentation of the paraphyses.
Taxonomy
Geoglossum was described by Christian Hendrik Persoon in 1794, who created the genus to accommodate Clavaria ophioglossoides L. and three other species: Geoglossum hirsutum, Geoglossum lilacinum, and Geoglossum viride. Persoon expanded the genus in several subsequent publications and the name was sanctioned by Elias Magnus Fries in his 1821Systema Mycologicum I. Several mycologists have treated the genus extensively since Persoon's first work, including George Edward Massee, Elias Judah Durand, Curtis Gates Lloyd, Fred Jay Seaver, and Edwin Butterworth Mains. Synonyms of Geoglossum include Frigyes Ákos Hazslinszky's Cibalocoryne and Corynetes, Pier Andrea Saccardo's 1884 Microglossum, and Otto Kuntze's 1891 Thuemenidium. In 1908, Durand circumscribed Gloeoglossum to contain Geoglossum species with paraphyses in a continuous gelatinous layer on the stipe, but the genus is not considered to have independent taxonomic significance. Modern systematic analysis is sparse, though recent molecular studies have supported Geoglossum as monophyletic.
Description
The fruit bodies of Geoglossum species are usually club-shaped, with a surface that is dry to sticky or gelatinous, and brown to black. The hymenium is confined to the upper club-shaped part of the fruit body. Stipes are slender and cylindrical, with a surface texture ranging from smooth to squamulose, or, in some instances, covered with tufts of tiny hairs. The asci are club-shaped, inoperculate, and usually contain eight ascospores. These spores are club-shaped to somewhat cylindrical to somewhat fusiform. Brown to hyaline in color, there are both septate and non-septate forms. There are paraphyses mixed with the asci, and in some species these occur on the stipes scattered or grouped together so as to form small tufts or scales. In some species they are spread out on the stipe surface as a continuous gelatinous layer.
Distribution
Geoglossum species are found worldwide and have been studied extensively in Asia, Australasia, Europe, India, North America, and South America.
Selected species
currently lists 160 names of Geoglossum, including forms and varieties, though many dubious and invalid names and synonyms have been published in the genus to date. The Dictionary of the Fungi recognizes 22 species. However, a number of new combinations and novel species have been proposed since, based on molecular and morphological data.
Conservation
Several species of Geoglossum are considered to be of conservation significance and many species are found on Regional Red Lists of several European countries. Geoglossum are common components of the endangered waxcap grassland habitat in Europe. G. arenarium is listed as vulnerable in EstoniaG. atropurpureum is a UK Biodiversity Action Plan Priority species, and is listed as critically endangered in Denmark and Estonia. G. atrovirens is listed as critically endangered in Estonia. G. cookeanum is listed as endangered in Switzerland. G. difforme is listed as critically endangered in Denmark and endangered in Sweden. G. glabrum is listed as critical in Czech Republic. G. hakelieri is listed as vulnerable in Sweden. G. littorale is listed as critically endangered in Denmark, and endangered in Sweden. G. sphagnophilum is listed as endangered in Denmark. G. starbaeckii is listed as vulnerable in Denmark. G. uliginosum is listed as critically endangered in Sweden. G. umbratile is listed as critically endangered in Bulgaria.