Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8380014 | Current Opinion in Plant Biology | 2018 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
It has long been postulated that symbiotic fungi facilitated plant migrations onto land through enhancing the scavenging of mineral nutrients and exchanging these for photosynthetically fixed organic carbon. Today, land plant-fungal symbioses are both widespread and diverse. Recent discoveries show that a variety of potential fungal associates were likely available to the earliest land plants, and that these early partnerships were probably affected by changing atmospheric CO2 concentrations. Here, we evaluate current hypotheses and knowledge gaps regarding early plant-fungal partnerships in the context of newly discovered fungal mutualists of early and more recently evolved land plants and the rapidly changing views on the roles of plant-fungal symbioses in the evolution and ecology of the terrestrial biosphere.
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Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Plant Science
Authors
Grace A Hoysted, Jill Kowal, Alison Jacob, William R Rimington, Jeffrey G Duckett, Silvia Pressel, Suzanne Orchard, Megan H Ryan, Katie J Field, Martin I Bidartondo,