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Plants, fungi and oomycetes: a 400‐million year affair that shapes the biosphere
Author(s) -
Selosse MarcAndré,
StrulluDerrien Christine,
Martin Francis M.,
Kamoun Sophien,
Kenrick Paul
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
new phytologist
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.742
H-Index - 244
eISSN - 1469-8137
pISSN - 0028-646X
DOI - 10.1111/nph.13371
Subject(s) - biosphere , ecology , natural history , biology , geography
10 New Phytologist Workshop on the ‘Origin and evolution of plants and their interactions with fungi’, London, UK, September 2014 In a rare gathering, genomics met palaeontology at the 10 New Phytologist Workshop on the ‘Origin and evolution of plants and their interactions with fungi’. An eclectic group of 17 expertsmet at The Natural History Museum (London, UK) on 9–10 September 2014 to discuss the latest findings on plant interactions with fungi (Eumycota) and oomycetes (Oomycota = Peronosporomycota), with topics ranging from the fossil record and comparative genomics to symbiosis and phytopathology. The discussions were largely disseminated via socialmedia (Box 1).Highly diverse plant– fungal interactions have formed the backbone of land ecosystems and biogeochemical cycles since the Palaeozoic (see Fig. 1 for geological timeframe). As summarized by Christine StrulluDerrien andPaulKenrick (TheNaturalHistoryMuseum,London, UK) the first land plants arose c. 470 million years (Myr) ago (Kenrick et al., 2012; Edwards et al., 2014), at which time fungi and oomycetes had already colonized terrestrial ecosystems. Following their terrestrialization, these microbes began to abound within plant fossils (Taylor et al., 2014, and references therein). Ultimately, biological interactions sculpted the genomes of plants, fungi and oomycetes (e.g. Schmidt & Panstruga, 2011; Kohler et al., 2015). Here we illustrate the picture that has emerged from the discussions at the 10 New Phytologist Workshop, and point to some pending questions.

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