Abstract

Contents Summary 1108 I. Introduction 1108 II. Mycorrhizal plant diversity at global and local scales 1108 III. Mycorrhizal evolution in plants: a brief update 1111 IV. Conclusions and perspectives 1114 References 1114 Summary The majority of vascular plants are mycorrhizal: 72% are arbuscular mycorrhizal ( AM ), 2.0% are ectomycorrhizal (EcM), 1.5% are ericoid mycorrhizal and 10% are orchid mycorrhizal. Just 8% are completely nonmycorrhizal ( NM ), whereas 7% have inconsistent NM – AM associations. Most NM and NM – AM plants are nutritional specialists (e.g. carnivores and parasites) or habitat specialists (e.g. hydrophytes and epiphytes). Mycorrhizal associations are consistent in most families, but there are exceptions with complex roots (e.g. both EcM and AM ). We recognize three waves of mycorrhizal evolution, starting with AM in early land plants, continuing in the Cretaceous with multiple new NM or EcM linages, ericoid and orchid mycorrhizas. The third wave, which is recent and ongoing, has resulted in root complexity linked to rapid plant diversification in biodiversity hotspots.

Keywords

BiologySymbiosisMycorrhizaBotanyBiodiversityMycorrhizal fungiEcologyArbuscular mycorrhizaHorticulture

MeSH Terms

BiodiversityBiological EvolutionMycorrhizaePlantsSymbiosis

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
2018
Type
review
Volume
220
Issue
4
Pages
1108-1115
Citations
1441
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

1441
OpenAlex
37
Influential
1276
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Cite This

Mark Brundrett, Leho Tedersoo (2018). Evolutionary history of mycorrhizal symbioses and global host plant diversity. New Phytologist , 220 (4) , 1108-1115. https://doi.org/10.1111/nph.14976

Identifiers

DOI
10.1111/nph.14976
PMID
29355963

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%