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Ancient Fungi Dates Back Far Earlier Than Thought

Research shows fungi diversified hundreds of millions of years before land plants and engineered early ecosystems by recycling nutrients and creating primitive soils, scientists say.

  • Recently, researchers at the Earth‑Life Science Institute at the Institute of Science Tokyo studied iron‑rich hot springs in Japan and found early microbes harnessed iron and traces of oxygen about 2.3 billion years ago.
  • Faced with rising oxygen, ancient microorganisms adapted and persisted despite the lethal surge caused by cyanobacteria during the Great Oxygenation Event about 2.3 billion years ago.
  • Metagenomic analysis revealed mixed communities in the five hot springs, where microaerophilic iron‑oxidizing bacteria dominated four sites and metabolized oxygen, carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur, Shawn McGlynn said.
  • Molecular clock and gene‑swap evidence pushed fungal diversification earlier, with OIST finding fungi diversified hundreds of millions of years before land plants using 17 horizontal gene transfer events.
  • Researchers say the study may guide astrobiology searches as Fatima Li‑Hau notes mycorrhizal fungi boost plant productivity by up to 40 percent, with Rhizocore Technologies treating 600,000 trees.
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Live Science broke the news in United States on Thursday, September 25, 2025.
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