RRC ID 74059
Author Cosme M.
Title Mycorrhizas drive the evolution of plant adaptation to drought.
Journal Commun Biol
Abstract Plant adaptation to drought facilitates major ecological transitions, and will likely play a vital role under looming climate change. Mycorrhizas, i.e. strategic associations between plant roots and soil-borne symbiotic fungi, can exert strong influence on the tolerance to drought of extant plants. Here, I show how mycorrhizal strategy and drought adaptation have been shaping one another throughout the course of plant evolution. To characterize the evolutions of both plant characters, I applied a phylogenetic comparative method using data of 1,638 extant species globally distributed. The detected correlated evolution unveiled gains and losses of drought tolerance occurring at faster rates in lineages with ecto- or ericoid mycorrhizas, which were on average about 15 and 300 times faster than in lineages with the arbuscular mycorrhizal and naked root (non-mycorrhizal alone or with facultatively arbuscular mycorrhizal) strategy, respectively. My study suggests that mycorrhizas can play a key facilitator role in the evolutionary processes of plant adaptation to critical changes in water availability across global climates.
Volume 6(1)
Pages 346
Published 2023-3-30
DOI 10.1038/s42003-023-04722-4
PII 10.1038/s42003-023-04722-4
PMID 36997637
PMC PMC10063553
MeSH Adaptation, Physiological Droughts Mycorrhizae* / genetics Phylogeny Plants / genetics Plants / microbiology Symbiosis
IF 4.165
Resource
GBIF Occurrence data of seagrasses in Southeast Asia extracted from literature Microbial Culture Collection, National Institute for Environmental Studies