Devonian Fungi: Interactions with the Green Alga Palaeonitella
- 1 November 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Mycologia
- Vol. 84 (6) , 901-910
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00275514.1992.12026222
Abstract
This paper describes three new taxa of fossil aquatic fungi preserved in 400-million-year-old Lower Devonian Rhynic Chert. All of the fungal morphotypes are attached to cells of the green alga Palaeonitella cranii. Milleromyces rhyniensis is characterized by a holocarpic, epibiotic zoosporangium with an elongate discharge tube that penetrates the host cell wall; arising from the base of the sporangium is an extensive rhizoidal system. Stages in infection by presumed zoospores are documented. In Lyonomyces pyriformis the globose-pyriform thallus is embedded in the surface coating of the cell wall. At the base of each thallus is a single rhizoid. Krispiromyces is extramatrical, holocarpic, and characterized by a short beak-like discharge papilla. The rhizoidal system appears to be apophysate. Some of these fungi were probably saprobes, while others were deemed parasitic because of the extensive hypertrophy of some of the algal cells. Although not all life history stages are represented, the discovery of these Lower Devonian forms greatly expands our knowledge of the biology and diversity of aquatic fungi in an ancient freshwater ecosystem.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Parasitism in a 400-million-year-old green algaNature, 1992
- Aglaophyton major, a non-vascular land-plant from the Devonian Rhynie ChertBotanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 1986
- The classification of Spizellomyces, Gaertneriomyces, Triparticalcar, and Kochiomyces (Spizellomycetales, Chytridiomycetes)Canadian Journal of Botany, 1984
- Algae from the Rhynie ChertBotanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 1983
- An outline for the reclassification of the Chytridiales, and for a new order, the SpizellomycetalesCanadian Journal of Botany, 1980
- Aquatic PhycomycetesPublished by Biodiversity Heritage Library ,1960
- TWO NEW GENERA OF OPERCULATE CHYTRIDSAmerican Journal of Botany, 1939
- STUDIES IN THE CHYTRIDIALES III. A PARASITIC CHYTRID CAUSING CELL HYPERTROPHY IN CHARAAmerican Journal of Botany, 1928
- XXXIII.—On Old Red Sandstone Plants showing Structure, from the Rhynie Chert Bed, Aberdeenshire. Part V. The Thallophyta occurring in the Peat-Bed; the Succession of the Plants throughout a Vertical Section of the Bed, and the Conditions of Accumulation and Preservation of the DepositTransactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 1921