4.7 Editorial Material

Sharing and double-dating in the lichen world

Journal

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
Volume 30, Issue 8, Pages 1751-1754

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mec.15884

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Negaunee Foundation
  2. Grainger Bioinformatics Center
  3. Field Museum

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Recent studies on lichen diversity have focused on the symbiotic relationship between fungi, algae, and cyanobacteria, with a particular emphasis on the overlooked diversity of cyanobacterial symbionts. Sequencing over 650 specimens has revealed evidence of symbiont sharing among distantly related fungi and temporal discordance among interacting fungal and cyanobacterial lineages.
Historic and modern efforts to understand lichen diversity and evolution have overwhelmingly concentrated on that of the fungal partner, which represents one of the most taxonomically diverse nutritional modes among the Fungi. But what about the algal and cyanobacterial symbionts? An explosion of studies on these cryptic symbionts over the past 20+ years has facilitated a richer understanding of their diversity, patterns of association, and the symbiosis itself. In a From the Cover article in this issue of Molecular Ecology, Dal Forno et al. (2021) provide new insight into one of the most fascinating lichen symbioses. By sequencing cyanobacterial symbionts from over 650 specimens, they reveal the presence of overlooked cyanobacterial diversity, evidence for symbiont sharing among distantly related fungi, and utilize a comparative dating framework to demonstrate temporal discordance among interacting fungal and cyanobacterial lineages.

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