4.6 Article

Arthrobotrys blastospora sp. nov. (Orbiliomycetes): A Living Fossil Displaying Morphological Traits of Mesozoic Carnivorous Fungi

Journal

JOURNAL OF FUNGI
Volume 9, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jof9040451

Keywords

blastospores; fossil fungi; nematode-trapping fungi; Orbiliaceae; relic species; trapping structures

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During a survey in Yunnan, China, two new species of carnivorous fungi resembling the ancient P. dimorphus were discovered and identified as Arthrobotrys blastospora. This finding resolves the uncertainties surrounding the accuracy and ancestral position of P. dimorphus.
The evolution of carnivorous fungi in deep time is still poorly understood as their fossil record is scarce. The approximately 100-million-year-old Cretaceous Palaeoanellus dimorphus is the earliest fossil of carnivorous fungi ever discovered. However, its accuracy and ancestral position has been widely questioned because no similar species have been found in modern ecosystems. During a survey of carnivorous fungi in Yunnan, China, two fungal isolates strongly morphologically resembling P. dimorphus were discovered and identified as a new species of Arthrobotrys (Orbiliaceae, Orbiliomycetes), a modern genus of carnivorous fungi. Phylogenetically, Arthrobotrys blastospora sp. nov. forms a sister lineage to A. oligospora. A. blastospora catches nematodes with adhesive networks and produces yeast-like blastospores. This character combination is absent in all other previously known modern carnivorous fungi but is strikingly similar to the Cretaceous P. dimorphus. In this paper, we describe A. blastospora in detail and discuss its relationship to P. dimorphus.

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