Agaricaceae
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The Agaricaceae are a family of basidiomycete fungi and include the genus Agaricus, as well as basidiomycetes previously classified in the families Tulostomataceae, Lepiotaceae, and Lycoperdaceae.
TaxonomyEdit
The family Agaricaceae was published by French botanist François Fulgis Chevallier in 1826.<ref name="Chevallier 1826"/> It is named after the type genus Agaricus, originally circumscribed by Carl Linnaeus in his 1753 work Species Plantarum. In his authoritative 1986 classification of the Agaricales, Rolf Singer divided the Agaricaceae into four tribes distinguished largely by spore color: Leucocoprineae, Agariceae, Lepioteae, and Cystodermateae.<ref name="Singer 1986"/> Genera once classified in the families Tulostomataceae, Battarreaceae, Lycoperdaceae, and Mycenastraceae have since been moved to the Agaricaceae based on molecular phylogenetics studies.<ref name="urlMycoBank: Agaricaceae"/> According to a standard reference text, the Agaricaceae contains 85 genera and 1340 species.<ref name="Kirk 2008"/>
DescriptionEdit
Agaricaceae species use a wide variety of fruit body morphology. Although the pileate form (i.e., with a cap and stipe) is predominant, gasteroid and secotioid forms are known. In pileate species, the gills are typically thin, and free from attachment to the stipe. Caps are scurfy to smooth, and range from roughly flat to umbonate. They typically have a centrally attached stipe and a membrane-like partial veil.<ref name="Cannon 2007"/> The species formerly classified in the family Lycoperdaceae are also known as the "true puffballs". Their fruiting bodies are round and are composed of a tough skin surrounding a mass of spores. When they mature, the skin splits open and they release their spores.
The spore print color of Agaricaceae species is highly variable, ranging from white to greenish to ochraceous to pink or sepia; rusty-brown or cinnamon brown colours are absent. Microscopically, the spore surface ranges from smooth to ornamented, and the presence of a germ pore is variable. Amyloidity (i.e. sensitivity to staining in Melzer's reagent) is also variable. The basidia (spore-bearing cells) are usually small, four-spored, and may have interspersed cystidia.<ref name="Cannon 2007"/>
GeneraEdit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} The extinct genus Coprinites is one of four known Agaricaceae genera in the fossil record. Others include Aureofungus, Protomycena, and Archaeomarasmius. Archaeomarasmius leggeti, from Atlantic Coastal Plain amber, is 90–94 Ma); the other fossil genera are from Dominican amber and date to 15–20 Ma.<ref name="Hibbett 2003"/>
The family currently includes the following genera: Template:Div col
- Agaricus
- Barcheria
- Bovista
- Calbovista previously in family Lycoperdaceae.
- Calvatia
- Chamaemyces
- Chlorophyllum
- Clarkeinda
- Coniolepiota
- †Coprinites
- Coprinus
- Cystoagaricus
- Cystolepiota
- Disciseda
- Endoptychum
- Eriocybe
- Gyrophragmium
- Handkea
- Heinemannomyces
- Hymenagaricus
- Lepiota
- Leucoagaricus
- Leucocoprinus
- Lycoperdon
- Macrolepiota
- Melanophyllum
- Micropsalliota
- Montagnea
- Podaxis
- Ripartitella
- Rugosospora
- Sericeomyces
- Smithiomyces
- Tulostoma
- Verrucospora
EcologyEdit
The Agaricaceae are widely distributed. Most species are saprobic and prefer grassland and woodland habitats.<ref name="Cannon 2007"/> Genera Leucoagaricus and Leucocoprinus are known to be cultivated by fungus-growing ants in ant-fungus mutualism.<ref name="Hölldobler 2009"/>
Economic significanceEdit
The genus Agaricus includes some species that are cultivated commercially throughout the world. The common "button mushroom", Agaricus bisporus, is the most widely cultivated edible mushroom. Agaricus blazei is a well-known medicinal mushroom used for a number of therapeutic and medicinal purposes.<ref name="Lima 2011"/><ref name="Wang 2013"/> Several species are poisonous, such as some Lepiota, Agaricus sect. Xanthodermatei and Chlorophyllum species .<ref name="Cannon 2007"/>