Fungal Names
Fungal Names is one of three internationally recognised repositories for the registration of fungal names, alongside Index Fungorum and MycoBank. It is operated by the State Key Laboratory of Mycology at the Institute of Microbiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences. The platform was launched in 2011 and was recognised in 2012 by the Nomenclature Committee for Fungi and ratified by the International Mycological Association as an official registration repository. Under the International Code of Nomenclature, new fungal names published on or after 1 January 2013—and lecto-, neo-, or epitypifications on or after 1 January 2019—must cite an identifier issued by one of the recognised repositories; FN issues such identifiers and synchronises registrations with the other repositories. As of early 2022, FN indexed more than 567,000 taxon names and 147,000 type records and integrates links to specimens, culture collections and herbaria/fungaria, publications, and taxonomists.
History
The creation of FN followed long-recognised problems in fungal nomenclature, where historical literature and databases contain synonymy, homonymy, isonymy, orthographical variants, and misapplied names that hinder unambiguous usage. Under Chapter F of the Code, Art. F.5 requires nomenclatural novelties published on or after 1 January 2013 to cite an identifier issued by a recognised repository, and from 1 January 2019 applies the same registration requirement to lectotypifications, neotypifications, and epitypifications. Contemporary best-practice guidance for authors summarises these obligations and identifies the three recognised repositories as Fungal Names, Index Fungorum, and MycoBank. FN was established in September 2011 and, in December 2012, was recognised as one of the three global registration repositories together with Index Fungorum and MycoBank. Identifiers are unique and mutually accepted among the three systems; at the time of publication FN was allocating numbers in the 570000–579999 range, and the repositories share updates via application programming interfaces on a regular schedule. Contemporary accounts also described MycoBank's role as a coordination hub facilitating data exchange among the three repositories during the roll-out of mandatory registration.Scope and purpose
FN serves simultaneously as a registration platform for nomenclatural novelties and as a knowledge base that integrates nomenclature with information on types, preserving agencies, culture collections, herbaria/fungaria, publications, and the researchers who publish fungal names. By standardising names and cross-linking to external resources, FN aims to reduce inconsistency, prevent homonymy at the point of registration, and facilitate reliable data exchange and retrieval across fungal biodiversity resources.Functions and features
The registration workflow issues an identifier immediately on submission, followed by administrator review. If revision is requested and no response is received within the set period, a pre-issued identifier may be withdrawn. During submission, the system normalises input by offering controlled options for author names, preserving agencies, and collection countries, and it checks the proposed name against a standardised reference of existing fungal names to avoid creating homonyms. In addition to the 27 principal and secondary ranks used in fungal taxonomy, FN accommodates "other rank" to capture exceptional or transitional usages proposed in the literature.Search and display functions allow queries by rank, epithet, year of publication, and registration identifier; author, journal, and preserving agency records have interlinked detail pages. These show taxonomy, typification, bibliography, and cross-references to the other repositories where available. FN also provides an internal transcribed spacer sequence alignment tool for preliminary specimen identification, returning alignments, a simple tree view, and links to corresponding entries in FN and NCBI. A name-standardisation tool implements the "one fungus, one name" principle by resolving misspellings and variant usages to a current name; a fuzzy-search option lists similarly spelled names with identity percentages to help users reach the correct record when input is uncertain.
Data content and processing
FN includes over 567,000 taxon names spanning fungi sensu lato, with more than 149,000 current species-level names. It stores over 120,000 collection records of type specimens and several thousand records of type illustrations, and it integrates more than 10,000 mycology-related journals and books that have published fungal names. The system also maintains an author dataset covering more than 25,000 taxonomists and some 750,000 author–name pairings derived from published records. Newly released names and updates are exchanged among the three recognised repositories on a monthly cycle, including nomenclatural changes, types, classification, and new registrations.To support consistent retrieval, historical rank denotations are reclassified to fourteen standard principal and secondary ranks; records are cleaned, validated, and cross-linked to Index Fungorum, MycoBank, and NCBI Taxonomy. Typification data are mapped to biorepositories, and abbreviations for culture collections and herbaria/fungaria are normalised against public standards. FN links type strains to the Global Catalogue of Microorganisms where numbers are available, and integrates datasets covering hundreds of culture collections and several thousand herbaria and fungaria worldwide.