AI Article Synopsis

  • Interactions between fungi and plants, like parasitism and mutualism, have played a vital role in their evolution and success over time.
  • Fungi helped facilitate plant colonization of land, with key evolutionary events occurring around 720 million years ago, leading to the development of symbiotic relationships and increased plant diversity around 480 million years ago.
  • The diversification of saprotrophic mushrooms and their relationship with the rise of forests and later, angiosperms, marked significant evolutionary developments through various geological periods, including the Mesozoic and Cretaceous.

Article Abstract

Interactions between fungi and plants, including parasitism, mutualism, and saprotrophy, have been invoked as key to their respective macroevolutionary success. Here we evaluate the origins of plant-fungal symbioses and saprotrophy using a time-calibrated phylogenetic framework that reveals linked and drastic shifts in diversification rates of each kingdom. Fungal colonization of land was associated with at least two origins of terrestrial green algae and preceded embryophytes (as evidenced by losses of fungal flagellum, ca. 720 Ma), likely facilitating terrestriality through endomycorrhizal and possibly endophytic symbioses. The largest radiation of fungi (Leotiomyceta), the origin of arbuscular mycorrhizae, and the diversification of extant embryophytes occurred ca. 480 Ma. This was followed by the origin of extant lichens. Saprotrophic mushrooms diversified in the Late Paleozoic as forests of seed plants started to dominate the landscape. The subsequent diversification and explosive radiation of Agaricomycetes, and eventually of ectomycorrhizal mushrooms, were associated with the evolution of Pinaceae in the Mesozoic, and establishment of angiosperm-dominated biomes in the Cretaceous.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6303338PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-07849-9DOI Listing

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