- The
Lycoperdales are a now
outdated order of fungi. The
order included some well-known
types such as the
giant puffball, the earthstars, and
other tuberous...
- gem-studded puffball. It was
formerly classified within the now-obsolete
order Lycoperdales, as the type
genus which,
following a
restructuring of
fungal taxonomy...
-
family Geastraceae,
which includes the "earthstars"
formerly placed in
Lycoperdales or Phallales.
Approximately 64
species are
classified in this family...
-
Truncocolumella citrina Major orders:
Agaricales (including now-obsolete
orders Lycoperdales, Tulostomatales, and Nidulariales) Basidiomycetes: Agaricales: Lycoperdaceae:...
- of 'fungus gnat' in the
family Mycetophilidae.
Reared from
puffballs (
Lycoperdales).
Fauna Europaea A. M. Hutson, D. M.
Ackland and L. N. Kidd (1980) Diptera...
- (stinkhorns) rely on
insect vectors for dispersal. The dry
spores of the
Lycoperdales (puffballs) and
Sclerodermataceae (earth
balls and kin) are dis****d...
-
include two
gasteroid lineages,
including a
puffball lineage in the
Lycoperdales, and the bird's nest
fungi in the Nidulariales.
Mushrooms of Northeastern...
- forms. Similarly,
modern classifications divide the
gasteroid order Lycoperdales between Agaricales and Phallales. All
members of the
class produce basidiocarps...
- 94.22.12002. PMC 23683. PMID 9342352.
Kruger D, et al. (2001). "The
Lycoperdales. A
molecular approach to the
systematics of some
gasteroid mushrooms"...
- puffballs. It was
formerly classified within the now-obsolete
order Lycoperdales, which,
following a
restructuring of
fungal taxonomy brought about by...