Research Keyword: mycobiome assembly

Gut fungal profiles reveal phylosymbiosis and codiversification across humans and nonhuman primates

This research reveals that fungi living in primate guts follow evolutionary patterns similar to their hosts, suggesting these fungi are not just temporary visitors from diet but long-term residents. By comparing gut fungal communities across humans, chimpanzees, gorillas, and other primates, scientists found that closely related species harbor similar fungi. Some fungal species even appear to have evolved alongside their primate hosts over millions of years, indicating deep evolutionary partnerships.

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Gut fungal profiles reveal phylosymbiosis and codiversification across humans and nonhuman primates

Researchers studied fungal communities in the guts of humans and various primates to understand how these fungi evolved alongside their hosts. They discovered that more closely related primate species have more similar fungal communities, and that some fungi show signs of evolving together with primates over millions of years. These findings suggest that gut fungi are long-term partners with their hosts rather than temporary travelers from diet alone.

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