Fungal Species: Mycena galopus

Diversity of fungi attached to birds corresponds to the habitat ecologies of their avian dispersal vectors

Researchers found that birds carry hundreds of different types of fungi on their feathers and feet, with different bird species carrying different fungal communities based on where they live and what they eat. European robins living in deciduous forests and gardens carried different fungi than goldcrests living in conifer forests, suggesting birds pick up fungi from their specific habitats. This study shows that migrating birds may be important for spreading fungi across long distances, potentially including plant diseases and lichens that don’t spread well by wind.

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A timetree of Fungi dated with fossils and horizontal gene transfers

Scientists created a detailed family tree of fungi showing when different fungal groups evolved, dating back up to 1.4 billion years ago. They used information from fossils, genes shared between distantly related fungi, and chemical evidence to figure out the timeline. The results suggest that fungi interacted with early algae ancestors of plants for a very long time before modern plants took over land.

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A timetree of Fungi dated with fossils and horizontal gene transfers

Scientists created a detailed family tree showing when different types of fungi first evolved, going back over 1.4 billion years. They used fossil evidence and genetic information from fungi to figure out these ancient timelines. The study suggests that fungi and early plant ancestors interacted far earlier than previously thought, with a long gap before modern plants colonized land. This research helps us understand how fungi shaped the early evolution of life on Earth.

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