4.2 Article

Perithecial ascomycetes from the 400 million year old Rhynie chert: an example of ancestral polymorphism

Journal

MYCOLOGIA
Volume 96, Issue 6, Pages 1403-1419

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.2307/3762157

Keywords

anamorph; arthro-spores; ascomycete; ascospores; conidia; fossil fungi; Lower Devonian; mycoparasite; perithecium; Rhynie chert; teleomorph

Categories

Ask authors/readers for more resources

We describe a perithecial, pleomorphic ascomycetous fungus from 400 MaBP Early Devonian (40 mya) Rhynie chert; the fungus occurs in the cortex just beneath the epidermis of aerial stems and rhizomes of the vascular plant Asteroxylan. Perithecia are nearly spherical with a short, ostiolate neck that extends into a substomatal chamber of the host plant; periphyses line the inner surface of the ostiole. The ascocarp wall is multilayered and formed of septate hyphae; extending from the inner surface are elongate asci interspersed with delicate paraphyses. Asci appear to be unitunicate and contain tip to 16 smooth, uniseriate-biseriate ascospores. The method of ascospore liberation is unknown; however, the tip of the ascus is characterized by a narrow, slightly elevated circular collar. Ascospores appear 1-5 celled, and germination is from one end of the spore. Also present along the stems and interspersed among the perithecia are acervuli of conidiophores that are interpreted as the anamorph of the fungus. Conidiogenesis is thallic, basipetal and probably of the holoarthric-type; arthrospores are cube-shaped. Some perithecia contain mycoparasites in the form of hyphae and thick-walled spores of various sizes. The structure and morphology of the fossil fungus is compared with modern ascomycetes that produce perithecial ascocarps, and characters that define the fungus are considered in the context of ascomycete phylogeny.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.2
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available