Cordyceps is a
genus of
ascomycete fungi (sac fungi) that includes about 400 species. All
Cordyceps species are endoparasitoids, parasitic mainly on
insects and other
arthropods (they are thus
entomopathogenic fungi); a few are parasitic on other fungi. Until recently, the best known species of the genus was
Cordyceps sinensis, first recorded as
yartsa gunbu in Nyamnyi Dorje's 15th century Tibetan text
An ocean of Aphrodisiacal Qualities. and known as
yarsha gumba in Nepali and ""summer-grass, winter-worm" in English. In 2007,
nuclear DNA sampling revealed this species to be unrelated to most of the rest of the genus' members; as a result it was renamed
Ophiocordyceps sinensis and placed in a new family, the
Ophiocordycipitaceae.