Review
Tansley review no. 134
Blackwell Science, Ltd
Coevolution of roots and mycorrhizas of
land plants
Mark C. Brundrett
Author for correspondence:
M ark C. Brundrett
Fax: +1 618 94803641
Email:
[email protected]/
[email protected]
Soil Science and Plant Nutrition, Faculty of Natural & Agricultural Sciences, T he University of Western
Australia, Nedlands WA 6097, Australia; Postal address: Kings Park and Botanic Garden, Botanic
Gardens & Parks Authority, West Perth, 6005, Western Australia
Received: 3 December 2001
Accepted: 4 January 2002
Contents
Summary
275
V. Evolution of Roots
288
I. Introduction
276
VI. The Root as a Habitat for Fungi
290
II. Mycorrhizal Fungi
276
VII. Mycorrhizal Evolution Trends
295
III. The Dawn of Mycorrhizas
279
Acknowledgements
298
IV. Mycorrhizal Associations of Living and Extinct Plants
282
References
298
Summary
Key words: mycorrhizas, fungi, land
plants, evolution, phylogeny, roots,
morphology.
Here, the coevolution of mycorrhizal fungi and roots is assessed in the light of
evidence now available, from palaeobotanical and morphological studies and the
analysis of DNA-based phylogenies. The first bryophyte-like land plants, in the early
Devonian (400 million years ago), had endophytic associations resembling vesicular–
arbuscular mycorrhizas (VAM) even before roots evolved. Mycorrhizal evolution
would have progressed from endophytic hyphae towards balanced associations
where partners were interdependent due to the exchange of limiting energy and
nutrient resources. Most mycorrhizas are mutualistic, but in some cases the trend
for increasing plant control of fungi culminates in the exploitative mycorrhizas of
achlorophyllous, mycoheterotrophic plants. Ectomycorrhizal, ericoid and orchid
mycorrhizas, as well as nonmycorrhizal roots, evolved during the period of rapid
angiosperm radiation in the Cretaceous. It is hypothesised that roots gradually
evolved from rhizomes to provide more suitable habitats for mycorrhizal fungi
and provide plants with complex branching and leaves with water and nutrients.
Selection pressures have caused the morphological divergence of roots with
different types of mycorrizas. Root cortex thickness and exodermis suberization
are greatest in obligately mycorrhizal plants, while nonmycorrhizal plants tend to
have fine roots, with more roots hairs and relatively advanced chemical defences.
Major coevolutionary trends and the relative success of plants with different root
types are discussed.
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I. Introduction
Mycorrhizas (‘fungus-roots’) are symbiotic associations between
specialised soil fungi and plants. Seven types of mycorrhizas
are recognised, but several are very similar (Brundrett, 2002*).
Vesicular–arbuscular mycorrhizas ( VAM, also called arbuscular
mycorrhizas), are the most widespread type (see Section IV ).
Ectomycorrhizas (ECM) occur in certain families of gymnosperms and, dicotyledons and in one monocotyledon genus.
T he remaining types of mycorrhizas are restricted to specific
plant families. Certain angiosperm families have plants with
nonmycorrhizal (NM) roots (Brundrett, 1991).
Some terminology used to describe mycorrhizas in this
review differs from that used elsewhere. T he term balanced is
used to describe a category of mycorrhizal association where
we have good reason to believe that both organisms receive
substantial benefits and there is a quantitative relationship
between benefits received by both partners, due to simultaneous two-way exchange processes across a common interface.
Mycorrhizal associations where fungi do not seem to receive
any benefits from plants have been called epiparasitic, mycoheterotrophic, or cheating associations (Furman & Trappe,
1971; Leake, 1994; Taylor & Bruns, 1999). In this review
the term exploitative associations is used to reflect the nature
of the relationship from the fungal perspective. Balanced and
exploitative associations form the mid-point and one endpoint of a continuum of plant–fungus interactions that starts
with endophytic associations. Endophytic fungi live in plants
without causing symptoms (Wilson, 1993; Saikkonen et al.,
1998). A more comprehensive discussion of mycorrhizal definitions and terminology has been submitted (cited here as MC
Brundrett, unpublished*).
T he objectives of this review are to summarise knowledge
about mycorrhizal associations across the diversity of plant life
from a taxonomic and evolutionary perspective and identify
dominant evolutionary trends. First the origin of mycorrhizal
fungi and key stages in the evolution of their associations with
plants are considered. Root-fungus coevolution is discussed
to help provide explanations for why plants evolved mycorrhizas, how roots may have evolved as habitats for fungi, and
why their morphology varies between plants with different
associations. Finally, factors driving the evolution of mycorrhizal strategies in modern and ancient plants are discussed.
II. Mycorrhizal fungi
T here is only limited fossil evidence of Paleozoic fungi (Taylor
& Osborn, 1996), but molecular evidence suggests they diverged
from other living organisms deep in the Proterozoic ( Wang
et al., 1999). T hus, it is probable that the first terrestrial fungi
colonised land long before plants did. Soil surface microbial
communities containing fungi and algae were probably the
first terrestrial associations between fungi and photosynthetic
organisms (Gehrig et al., 1996; Evans & Johansen, 1999;
*Mycorrhiza (in press)
Schüßler & Kluge, 2000). Most Paleozoic fossils of fungi
resemble oomycetes, chytrids or zygomycetes, protoctistan
organisms that are not directly related to any mycorrhizal
fungus lineages (Taylor & Taylor, 1997). T hese fossils provide
examples of putative parasitic plant–fungus associations (similar
fungi probably were long established parasites of aquatic algae),
but evidence of saprophytism is rare until much later (Taylor
& Osborn, 1996). T here is scant fossil evidence of lichens
in the Paleozoic (Taylor & Osborn, 1996), except for a
Devonian fossil that may be a zygomycete lichen (Taylor et al.,
1997).
1. VAM fungi
T he VAM fungi of today are placed in the zygomycete order
Glomales in the genera Glomus, Acaulospora, Scutellospora,
Gigaspora, Paraglomus and Archaeospora (Morton & Redecker,
2001). T hese fungi are considered to be primitive due to their
relatively simple spores, their lack of sexual reproduction
and because there are relatively few species of these fungi and
they associate with a wide diversity of plants (Morton, 1990).
These fungi are incapable of growth without plants. Ribosomal
genome diversity within these fungi is consistent with the
absence of sexual reproduction and makes it difficult to define
species and individuals (Hosny et al., 1999; Pringle et al.,
2000). T he functional diversity of these fungi is likely to be
much greater than is suggested by the number of currently
recognised species (Brundrett, 1991; Abbott et al., 1992).
Fossil spores considered to belong to the Glomales are
found in the early Paleozoic (Table 1), but these may have
been saprophytic, algae-associated, or parasitic. T he antiquity
of mycorrhizal members of the Glomales is strongly supported
by phylogenetic analyses using DNA sequence data from living
taxa. Simon et al. (1993) estimated that the Glomales were of
similar age to land plants, but their study did not include
the most primitive members of this group (Redecker et al.,
2000b). Since the Glomales are one of the oldest groups of
true fungi and a monophyletic sister group to the dikaryomycetes (higher fungi) (Gehrig et al., 1996; Tehler et al.,
2000), they must be much older than land plants. T he occurrence of VAM fungi with morphology patterns that roughly
correspond to modern genera of the Glomales in Triassic roots
confirms that mycorrhizal glomalean fungi had evolved by
that time (Phipps & Taylor, 1996).
T he Glomales consist of a number of ancient lineages that
may have diverged before or after these fungi first became
mycorrhizal (Redecker et al., 2000b; Schüßler et al., 2001).
However, they form a single coherent lineage when differences
within them are contrasted with the extent of separation from
other living fungi.
It is inevitable that early land plants were colonised by
saprophytic, parasitic, or soil-surface fungi (Section III).
Saprophytic fungi are the most likely candidates, as they
would have the enzymes required to penetrate plant cell walls
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Review
Table 1 The early history of fungi in the Glomales thought to form vesicular–arbuscular mycorrhizas based on fossil evidence* and DNA
sequence data
Period
Evidence
Proterozoic
1500 Myr
Proterozoic?
> 570 Myr
Cambrian?
> 500 Myr
400 – 500 Myr
Suggested age of divergence of fungi from other life (Wang et al ., 1999)
O rdovician (460 Myr)*
Devonian (400 Myr) to Present*
Unknown to Present
DNA sequences show Glomalean fungi are monophyletic and may be the sister group to the higher fungi
(Schüßler et al ., 2001; Tehler et al ., 2000)
Fungi would have colonised land long before plants, but left scant early fossil evidence
(Taylor & O sborn, 1996)
Approximate origin of Glomales according to a DNA molecular clock estimates
(Berbee & Taylor, 1993; Simon et al ., 1993)
Earliest fossil spores identified as glomalean (Redecker et al ., 2000a)
Many reports of fossil spores resembling the Glomales (Pirozynski & Dalpé, 1989)
Geosiphon – a soil crust fungus with endosymbiotic cyanobacteria that rRNA sequence
data suggests is a primitive glomalean fungus (Schüßler & Kluge, 2000)
All dates are approximate.
(Taylor & Osborne, 1996). However, another possibility is
Geosiphon – a soil-surface fungus with endosymbiotic cyanobacteria (Schüßler & Kluge, 2000). Phylogenetic studies based
on SSU rDNA (18S) sequence data show that Geosiphon is
a primitive glomalean fungus (Tehler et al., 2000; Schüßler
et al., 2001). Geosiphon associations occur in swollen hyphae
with an endosymbiont interface similar to the arbuscule
interface of VAM (Schüßler & Kluge, 2000). T hus, some
characteristics of the first mycorrhizal fungi required for effective association with plants may have evolved during earlier
associations with cyanobacteria. A third possibility is that the
Glomales descended from endophytes of the algal precursors
of land plants, but no similar associations of marine algae are
known today (Kohlmeyer & Kohlmeyer, 1979). The Glomales
are not closely related to any of the parasitic fungi found in
early plant fossils (oomycetes and chytrids – Taylor & Osborn,
1996; Taylor & Taylor, 1997), and thus are unlikely to have a
parasitic ancestor. Other types of mycorrhizal fungi are much
younger than the Glomales (Tehler et al., 2000).
2. ECM fungi
ECM fungi include at least 6000 species, primarily of basidiomycetes with some ascomycetes and zygomycetes, but their
diversity is poorly known in tropical and southern regions
(Molina et al., 1992; Castellano & Bougher, 1994). Recognition
of fungi by mycorrhizal morphology (Agerer, 1995; Massicotte
et al., 1999), lipid profiles (Olsson, 1999), or DNA-based
methods (Gardes & Bruns, 1996; Jonsson et al., 1999) have
shown that ECM roots often contain fungi that cannot be
linked to epigeous fruiting bodies. T hese cryptic fungi may
produce hypogeous sequestrate (truffle-like) (Bougher &
Lebel, 2001), or resupinate (crusting) fruiting bodies (Erland
& Taylor, 1999), or they may be sterile like the widespread
fungus Cenococcum geophilium (LoBuglio et al., 1996; Shinohara
et al., 1999), or fruit very infrequently.
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Phylogenetic studies using DNA-sequence data suggest that
the agarics are derived from wood rotting fungi (e.g. polypores), and two of the largest ECM groups, the Boletales
and Russulales, are sister to most other agarics (Moncalvo
et al., 2000). T he capacity to form ECM may have been a key
defining step in the evolution of the agarics. Fossil evidence
for larger fungi is very limited (Taylor & Taylor, 1997). It is
likely that a period of rapid diversification of the basidiomycetes
occurred in the Cretaceous, as plants with ECM associations
became important (Section IV ). ECM Basidiomycete taxa like
the Cortinariaceae, Boletales, Amanitaceae and Russulaceae
probably arose at this time. T he rapid diversification of these
fungi continues to this day, driven by increasing host and
habitat specificity. Further evidence that ECM fungi evolved
from saprophytic fungi, is provided by the production of
enzymes that can digest plant cell walls, but these generally
occur at much lower levels than in saprophytic fungi (Bending
& Read, 1997; Kohzu et al., 1999).
Ectomycorrhizal basidiomycetes are polyphyletic and interspersed with their saprophytic relatives, with multiple lineages
that have gained or lost the capacity to form mycorrhizas
(Hibbert et al., 2000; Moncalvo et al., 2000). However, most
ECM fungi belong to large basidiomycete families like the
Amanitaceae, Boletaceae and Russulaceae whose members are
highly consistent in their relationships with plants. Phylogenetic studies have shown that fungi with agaricoid, gastroid
and resupinate fruit bodies, classified in different families by
morphological schemes, can be closely related (Kretzer & Bruns,
1999). Ascomycetes which form ECM have four or more
separate origins (LoBuglio et al., 1996). T he polyphyletic
origins of ECM fungi (Hibbert et al., 2000; Moncalvo et al.,
2000) suggests there should be considerable functional
diversity in these fungi. For example, some primarily utilise
inorganic N, but most use organic N sources (Turnbull et al.,
1995; Gebauer & Taylor, 1999; Högberg et al., 1999). Other
ECM fungi are capable of weathering rock (Paris et al., 1995;
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Landerweert et al., 2001), or acquiring nutrients from other
soil organisms (Ponge, 1991; Lindahl et al., 1999).
ECM fungi associate with either a narrow, intermediate, or
broad range of host plants, and intermediate host range fungi
appear to be most common (Molina et al., 1992; Horton &
Bruns, 1998). T he fact that certain genera of fungi associate
with particular families of trees isstrong evidence for coevolution (Molina et al., 1992; Bougher et al., 1994; Kretzer et al., 1996;
Wu et al., 2000). Some geographic regions have many hypogeous
ECM fungi that have coevolved with mycophagous animals
(Cázares et al., 1999; Bougher & Lebel, 2001). Some ECM fungi
can be grown in axenic culture but some can not. These fungi are
not known to occur in nature in the absence of host their plants.
3. O ther mycorrhizal fungi
Mycorrhizal fungi that associate with members of the Ericaceae
and Epacridaceae include several groups of ascomycetes which
generally do not form mycorrhizas with other vascular plants
(Smith & Read, 1997). Studies of DNA sequences of fungi
from the these plants in Australia, Europe and North America
have revealed two or more distantly related groups of fungi
involved in ericoid mycorrhizas (McLean et al., 1999; Monreal
et al., 1999; Sharples et al., 2000). Hymenoscyphus-like fungi
associate with the Ericales and bryophytes throughout the
world, but other taxa are more restricted to specific geographic regions (Chambers et al., 1999; Read et al., 2000). It is
not certain whether ericoid mycorrhizal fungi exist primarily
as soil saprophytes, or as mycorrhizal associates of plants. If
they are less dependant on plants then VAM or ECM fungi,
their capacity to form mycorrhizal associations would not
be a factor driving their evolution (see below). Ericoid mycorrhizal associations are considered to detoxify highly acidic
soils and to acquire organic nutrients (Smith & Read, 1997).
Substantial nutritional benefits have been shown in some experiments, but not in others (Bell & Pate, 1996; Jansa & Vosátka,
2000) and these may be facultative associations (see VI.4).
Members of the Ericales with monotropoid or arbutoid
mycorrhizas (ECM–like associations) generally have much
higher host-fungus specificity than other ECM associations.
For example, several closely related species of the hypogeous
ECM genus Rhizopogon are the only known associates for
Pterospora and Sarcodes in western North America (Cullings
et al., 1996; Taylor & Bruns, 1999; Bruns & Read, 2000;
Kretzer et al., 2000).
Orchids have mycorrhizal associations with soil fungi
believed to be essential for seed germination and to assist the
growth of adult plants (Rasmussen, 1995; Currah et al., 1997).
Most orchids have fairly specific fungal associates that vary
between host species and habitat (Warcup, 1981; Ramsay
et al., 1987; Currah et al., 1997; Sen et al., 1999). Most of these
fungi are assigned to the anamorphic form genus Rhizoctonia
(Currah et al., 1997). It is not clear if orchid fungi from
different regions are more closely related to each other, or
to saprophytic or parasitic groups of Rhizoctonia species. For
example, Pope & Carter (2001) discovered that pathogenic
isolates from South Africa were the closest known relatives of
Rhizoctonia solani isolates from an Australian orchid (Pterostylis
sp.). It seems most likely that orchid fungi are a disparate
group with many separate origins and the recruitment of new
fungal lineages by orchids continues today (see below). T he
benefits provided by orchids to their mycorrhizal fungi, if any,
are not clear, as these fungi seem to grow as well without their
hosts as they do with them.
Saprophytic (myco-heterotrophic) orchids without chlorophyll have fully exploitative mycorrhizal associations that
supply both the energy and nutrient requirements of the host
(Leake, 1994). Many of these plants associate with fungi that
are not related to the mycorrhizal fungi of green orchids,
including ECM associates of trees, wood-rotting and parasitic
fungi (Table 2). T hese associations have a high degree of hostfungus specificity and species of Corallorhiza, Gastrodia and
Galeola may only associate with a single fungal genus (Table 2).
4. What is a mycorrhizal fungus?
Categories of mycorrhizal associations and fungi in Table 3
are defined by differences in evolution or inferred from our
knowledge of the physiology and ecology of the organisms.
T he four types of mycorrhizal fungi in Table 3 are either: of
similar age to land plants; of similar age to the angiosperms;
recently recruited; or not coevolving with plants. The Glomales
are unique as the only monophyletic mycorrhizal fungus
lineage that has coevolved with land plants throughout their
history. Other mycorrhizal fungi have polyphyletic lineages
that represent parallel or convergent evolution (Table 3). There
is a strong relationship between the age of plant–fungus associations and the degree of dependence of mycorrhizal fungi on
their hosts, as all VAM and some ECM fungi are incapable of
independent growth (in nature or axenic culture), while other
categories of mycorrhizal fungi can grow without host plants.
Mycorrhizal fungi with a high degree of host specificity are
likely to track the evolution of their hosts closely, while others
are likely to evolve much more independently. In particular,
ECM fungi seem to be evolving faster than their hosts, resulting
in a great diversity of fungal taxa and ECM root structures.
T he greatest uncertainty concerns fungi forming ericoid and
orchid associations capable of growth without plants, which
probably include recently recruited lineages of soil fungi. If
the primary role of these category 3 fungi is as saprophytes,
or parasites, their evolution will not be influenced by plants.
T here are likely to be some exceptions to the generalisations
in Table 3. T he lichen fungi are also polyphyletic, with five
separate known origins from basidiomycete or ascomycete
fungi (Gargas et al., 1995).
In conclusion, four types of mycorrhizal fungi with major
differences in their biology and evolution can be recognised.
Mycorrhizal associations also have major differences in,
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Review
Table 2 Examples of mycorrhizal associations restricted to small groups of angiosperms which are likely to be of recent origin
Hosts
Structure
Fungi
References
Exploitative orchids
without chlorophyll
(e.g. Corallorhiza)
Hyphal coils in rhizome cells (orchid)
ECM associates of trees
(Russulaceae or Telephoraceae)
Furman & Trappe (1971);
Leake (1994);
Taylor & Bruns (1999)
Exploitative orchids
(Galeola, Gastrodia,
Erythrorchis)
Hyphal coils in rhizome cells (orchid)
Highly specific associations with
wood rotting or parasitic fungi
(Armillaria, Armillariella)
Terashita & Chuman (1987);
Currah et al . (1997);
Umata (1998), (1999)
O rchid (Corybas)
Hyphae and vesicles in roots
(mycorrhizal?)
VAM fungi
Hall (1976)
Exploitative monotropoid
mycorrhizal plants
without chlorophyll
(M onotropa, Pterospora, Sarcodes)
ECM, but with hyphal projections
into host cells in very complex
interface
Highly specific ECM fungi
that also associate with trees
(e.g. Rhizopogon sp.)
Björkman (1960);
Castellano & Trappe (1985);
Bruns & Read (2000);
Kretzer et al . (2000)
Myco-heterotrophic plants
without chlorophyll in families
Burmanniaceae, Gentianaceae,
Triuridaceae, etc.
(e.g. Triuris, Thismia, Voyria)
VAM but with unusual patterns
of hyphal growth and often
without arbuscules
VAM fungi
McLennan (1958);
Leake (1994);
Imhof (1998), (1999abc)
Plants considered to
have partially exploitative VAM
(e.g. some Gentianaceae)
Require a companion plant
for mycorrhiza formation
VAM fungi
See text
Thysanotus (Anthericaceae)
ECM plants in
typically NM families
Kobresia: Cyperaceae,
Polygonum : Polygonaceae, Neea,
Pisonia: Nyctaginaceae
Hyphae in subepidermal cavity
Unknown fungi
ECM with mantle and Hartig net
ECM fungi
McGee (1988a);
Brundrett (1999)
Fontana (1963);
Massicotte et al . (1998);
Ashford & Allaway (1982)
Isolated examples of
ECM plants in VAM families:
(e.g. Dryas: Rosaceae)
Superficial ECM associations of
some herbaceous plants from
VAM families in Australia
(e.g. Asteraceae, Goodeniaceae)
ECM with mantle and Hartig net
ECM fungi
Melville et al . (1987)
ECM-like, but without mantle
and with a thin Hartig net.
Function uncertain
Ascomycetes that may not
form ECM with other plants
Warcup (1980);
Kope & Warcup (1986);
McGee (1988b)
Ericales in Hawaii
Ericoid mycorrhizas and VAM
with arbuscules
Ericoid and VAM fungi
Koske et al . (1990)
Sedges and rushes
(Cyperaceae, Restionaceae, etc.)
O ccasional VAM in roots of
some species but not others,
role uncertain
VAM fungi
Meney et al . (1993);
Lovera & Cuenca (1996);
Miller et al . (1999)
See Table 3 for abbreviations.
nutrient transfer processes, host-fungus specificity, etc.
(Table 3). Consequently, knowledge obtained from one
category of fungus or plant cannot be indiscriminately
applied to others. Mycorrhizal fungi differ from other fungi
primarily because they are dual soil-plant inhabitants that
would have evolved to become efficient at growth and nutrient
uptake in both soil and plants. Conversely, endophytes and
pathogens are primarily plant inhabitants without efficient
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means of acquiring nutrients from soils, and have evolved to
become more efficient at invading and living within plants.
III. The dawn of mycorrhizas
A sequence of events for the origin of mycorrhizal associations
is proposed here to stimulate debate. We are unlikely to ever
fully understand these evolutionary processes, due to limited
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Table 3 Evolutionary and functional categories of plant–fungus associations
Association:
Plant provides a key habitat for fungus
Fungus efficient at mineral nutrient acquisition
from soil
Interface hyphae highly specialised
Plant-fungus coevolution
Estimated age of association (Myr) (Table 3)
Host-fungus specificity
Role:
Mineral nutrient transfer to plant
Energy transfer to fungus
Energy transfer to plant
Plant:
Switched to new fungus lineages
Recruitment of new plant lineages continues
Photosynthesis
O bligate requirement for association
Fungus:
Multiple lineages of fungi
Recruitment of new fungal lineages continues
O bligate (host required for growth)
Capable of independent growth (in axenic culture)
Mycorrhizal fungus category (see text)
VAM
ECM
Ericoid
O rchid
Exploited
Pathogen
Endophyte
+
+
+−
+
−?
+
?
+
−?
− or +
+
−
+
−
+
+
> 400
low
+
+
> 100
medium
−
?
< 100
medium
−
−?
+ − 100
high, medium
+ or −
−
recent
extremely high
+
−
> 1000
varies
−
−
> 400
high?
+
+
− (+)
+
+
− (+)
+?
+?
−
+
− or + ?
+ or −
+
−
+
−
+
−
−
+−
−
−
?
+ (−)
+ or ±
+
+
+ (−)
+
+
−
+
+?
+
−
+ (−)
+ or −
+
+
−
+
+
+
−
+
+
−
−
−
+
−
1
+
+
+
+ or −
2
+
+?
?
+
+
+
−
+
+
+
−
+ or −
1, 2, 3 or 4
+
+
+
+
+
+ or −?
+ or −
+
not mycorrhizal
2 or 3
Q uestion marks indicate uncertain roles where further investigation is required, brackets indicate unusual states that sometimes occur.
2. Balanced
1. Endophytic
3. Exploitative
(a) CHANGES TO LAND PLANT
Energy efficiency
Digestion
of hyphae
Morphological specialisation
Dependence on fungus
Thallus
Attraction to
exudates
Rhizome
Root
Efficiency at acquiring soil nutrients
Dependence on host
Growth
in plant
Arbuscules
Specialisation
(b) CHANGES TO SOIL FUNGUS
fossil evidence. T he proposed stages in mycorrhizal evolution
outlined in Fig. 1 follow categories of plant–fungus interaction
defined in Section I: endophytic fungi; balanced associations;
and exploitative associations. T hese are stages in evolutionary
continua representing increasing levels of commitment and
specialisation by plants and fungi.
Fig. 1 The hypothetical order of (a) changes
to plants (upper half ) and (b) fungi (lower
half) during three stages in the evolution of
vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizas.
1. Endophytic associations
Endophytic fungi are ubiquitous in plants (Wilson, 1993;
Saikkonen et al., 1998) and are the most likely source of new
plant–fungus associations. T hese begin as casual associations
where both the plant and fungus have the capacity to exist
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alone. Some endophytes provide benefits, but others are probably detrimental to their hosts (Saikkonen et al., 1998). Fungal
endophytes benefit from occupying plants by gaining: greater
access to exudates; first access to organic substrates after the
death of the host; and avoidance of competition, predation
and parasitism from other soil organisms. Mycoparasitic soil
fungi similar to those that attack modern VAM fungi were
present in Paleozoic soils (Hass et al., 1994), probably following them onto land much earlier. T hus, early soil fungi would
have faced selection pressure to avoid parasitism, by growth
within plant organs. Extant VAM fungi commonly occur
within other organisms (Koske, 1984).
Early land plants growing in full sunlight would have had
abundant supplies of photosynthetically produced carbon
compounds that accumulated as starch and leaked as exudates
into the soil. T hese plants were exposed to an atmosphere with
much higher CO 2 concentrations than today (Mora et al.,
1996; Raven & Edwards, 2001). T he first land plants were
structurally very weak (Kenrick & Crane, 1997) and needed
to be highly permeable to acquire water and nutrients. T hus
these plants would have been highly attractive to soil fungi
(as are living bryophytes) (Section IV.1). T he first endophytic
fungi would have provided little or no benefit to their hosts,
but natural selection may have favoured plant-fungus
combinations that did. T hese endophytes may have largely
been restricted to intercellular spaces within plant tissues.
Palaeozoic plant fossils contain putative parasitic fungi
(Taylor & Osborne, 1996), and the first benefits provided by
endophytes might have been to protect plants from other
more harmful fungi. Antagonistic interactions between
parasitic and endophytic fungi seem to be common today
and are the main benefit provided by mycorrhizal fungi to
plants in some circumstances (Newsham et al., 1995; Cordier
et al., 1998).
T he first stage of evolution from endophytic to mycorrhizal
fungus would be specialisation to become more efficient
at absorption of food within plants, eventually resulting in
dependence on the host plant as a source of energy (Fig. 1). At
the endophytic stage benefits to the plant would be limited,
so it is unlikely that plants would face selection pressures to
become better habitats for fungi (Fig. 1). Many of the events
outlined above would also occur during the evolution of
paarasitic fungus–plant associations, but these differ in many
ways (see Section II.4). Events in the first stage of mycorrhizal
evolution are summarised below.
1 Fungi attracted by exudates proliferate on the surface of plants.
2 Fungi develop mechanisms for penetrating living plants
without causing harm to their hosts.
3 T he space within living plants becomes an important
habitat for these endophytes, providing them with shelter
from adverse soil conditions, parasitism and predation.
4 Fungi become dependant on the host for energy.
5 Absorptive hyphae within plants increase their surface area
and permeability.
© New Phytologist (2002) 154: 275 – 304
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Review
2. Balanced mutualistic associations
Exchange processes are likely to evolve if both partners have
commodities they can afford to release in exchange for limiting resources (Section VII). Early land plants would have had
abundant carbon compounds that would have accumulated
as starch and leaked into the soil as exudates (see above).
However, they are likely have been limited by mineral nutrients,
because their coarse rhizomes would have been inefficient at
acquiring nutrients (Section V ). It is likely that the first land
plants grew in soils that were no more fertile than is normal
today, due to waterlogging and efficient decomposition of
organic matter (Pirozynski & Malloch, 1975; Stubblefield &
Taylor, 1988; Taylor & Osborn, 1996). Nutrient availability
would also have been much lower in the oxidative soils of dry
land, relative to the aquatic environments where plants first
evolved (Gryndler, 1992).
Fungi, which had occupied soils for much longer than
plants, would already have evolved efficient means of foraging
for mineral nutrients. Foraging capacities of modern mycorrhizal fungi include dispersing widely through substrates,
responding to temporary, localised nutrient sources, competing
with other soil organisms and producing enzymes to release
organic nutrients (St. John et al., 1983; Harley, 1989; Marschner,
1995; Smith & Read, 1997). Soil fungi probably accumulated
greater quantities of mineral nutrients than they required for
immediate use as insurance against future shortages. It is possible that the first mycorrhizas were formed by a Geosiphonlike fungus with an abundant supply of nitrogen obtained
from associated cyanobacteria (Schüßler & Kluge, 2000).
T he first exchange processes which probably began in a
diffuse interface zone within the plant where certain cells of
the endophytic fungus evolved to become more permeable.
We would expect the increased permeability of fungal cells to
result in increased leakage of their contents. T his would be
especially true for substances which were not in short supply,
as there would be no strong selection pressure for mechanisms
to prevent loss. By contrast, there certainly would have been
very strong selection pressure for mechanisms that improved
the uptake of limiting resources. Evolutionary changes in membrane functions and wall structures by host and fungus would
result in the specialised interface typical of modern mycorrhizal
associations (Alexander et al., 1989; Smith & Read, 1997).
Mycorrhizal associations typically have synchronised metabolic activity of host and fungus interface cells that increases
rapidly for a limited time and then ceases. T his limited period
of commitment may have evolved as a safety mechanism to
limit energy losses when associations do not provide benefits.
However, this results in the need for plants to constantly
renew organs to continue receiving benefits from mycorrhizas
(Section VI). Balanced mycorrhizal associations occur within
plant organs that have evolved in part as specialised habitats
for fungi by increasing the efficiency of and/or limiting the
extent of mycorrhizal associations (see Section VI).
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282 Review
Tansley review no. 134
Recognition mechanisms to distinguish beneficial mycorrhizal fungi from harmful pathogens would have arisen early
in the evolution of balanced mycorrhizal associations. Research
with NM mutants has identified key stages in the colonisation
process where recognition of the fungus by the host plant is
necessary for mycorrhizal formation to proceed (Bonfante &
Perotto, 1995; Harrison, 1999). Fungal recognition of host roots
seems to be less precise, as mycorrhizal fungi often attempt to
penetrate nonhost roots and other plant organs (Brundrett, 1991).
T he digestion or collapse of hyphae is a consistent feature
of VAM and orchid associations but its significance is uncertain (Smith & Smith, 1990). T his process is considered to be
controlled by the host cell, but may be triggered by the fungus
(Alexander et al., 1989). T his capacity may have first evolved
as a defence against pathogenic fungi, although Pozo et al.
(1998) found different enzymes induced in root cells by VAM
fungi and pathogenic fungi. Hyphal digestion is not considered
to be important for nutrient transfer in balanced associations
(Smith & Smith, 1990), but may be more important in
exploitative plants. It is possible that early mycorrhizal associations were based on digestion of fungi before the two-way
exchange processes evolved. However, the capacity of plant
cells to digest hyphae has another consequence, which is probably more important, in that it allows re-invasion of the same
host cells by new hyphae, and extends the life of associations.
In present day plants this only occurs in some orchid and
exploitative associations within highly reduced organs, but
would have allowed the first land plants to make allow more
effective use of their coarse rhizomes.
Balanced mycorrhizal associations evolved to become the
primary source of mineral nutrients for plants (see Section
VI.4). By this stage, the fungus had evolved into a specialised
associate with a limited capacity for independent growth,
and fully dependent on the host for energy. T he most likely
sequence of events in the evolution of balanced mycorrhizas
from an endophytic fungal association is:
1 Hyphal adaptations for efficient absorption of substrates
from the plant result in increased leakage of mineral nutrients
to the host.
2 Plants containing fungi acquire limiting mineral nutrients
more efficiently from hyphae within them than by other means.
3 Plants evolve recognition mechanisms to distinguish mycorrhizal fungi from pathogens.
4 Specialised plant and fungi cells develop an interface zone
where exchange occurs.
5 Plants begin to digest older fungal structures within cells.
6 Fungal hyphae increase their capacity to acquire the soil
nutrients that limit plant growth.
7 T he plant becomes obligately mycorrhizal, requiring the
fungus for growth at normal soil fertility levels.
8 T he fungus becomes fully dependent on the plant as a food
source.
9 Plants evolve to become more efficient at mycorrhizal formation (Section VI).
3. Exploitative mycorrhizas
A third proposed stage in mycorrhizal evolution involves
fine-tuning of the morphology and physiology of plant organs
to gain greater control over mycorrhizal fungi. T his evolutionary trend can result in myco-heterotrophic plants without
chlorophyll that are full dependant on their fungi both for
mineral nutrients and energy, while the fungi apparently do
not benefit from these associations (Leake, 1994). T hese
plants have no commodities that can be used for exchange
with fungi (Section VII). Some plants are considered to have
partially exploitative mycorrhizas or only have these associations as young plants (Section IV ). T he evolution of mycoheterotrophic plants is discussed in Section VII.
4. Conclusions
A hypothetical scheme for mycorrhizal evolution is presented
in Fig. 1. In this scheme, the greatest changes initially occur
to the fungus, while changes to the plant occur later. T his
scheme is most relevant to VAM associations where the fungi
appear to have remained relatively static throughout much the
history of land plants (Section II). Other types of associations
started after plants already had many of the capabilities
required to form mycorrhizal associations (Section IV ).
IV. Mycorrhizal associations of living and
extinct plants
T he first land plants were thought to be bryophytes, similar
to liverworts or hornworts, with a horizontally spreading
thallus and separate sporophyte and gametophyte generations
(Kenrick & Crane, 1997; Renzaglia et al., 2000). Fossil evidence of these plants first appeared in the Mid Ordovician to
Early Silurian periods (476 – 432 myr old), but earlier spore
tetrads that may be from land plants are known (Table 4).
T he first land plants most likely evolved from freshwater
charophycean algae and probably required wet habitats
(Kenrick & Crane, 1997). T here are no structurally preserved
specimens of these plants to show if they were mycorrhizal.
T hese plants had no roots (Section V ).
1. Bryophytes
Mosses, the largest living group of bryophytes, are generally
not mycorrhizal, but often contain endophytic hyphae of
VAM fungi (Rabatin, 1980; Turnau et al., 1999). Liverworts
and hornworts have VAM–like associations with glomalean
fungi that form arbuscules in their thalli (Table 4). Fine endophytes (glomalean fungi with very narrow hyphae forming
VAM with arbuscules) are common in bryophytes, but other
VAM fungi, such as Glomus species, are also present ( Johnson,
1977; Turnau et al., 1999; Schüßler, 2000). Fine endophytes
have much narrower hyphae than other VAM fungi and may
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© New Phytologist (2002) 154: 275 – 304
Period
Plant
Mycorrhizas
O rdovician to Silurian (476 – 432 Myr)
O rdovician (476 Myr) to Present
The first bryophyte-like land plants
Liverworts and hornworts
Limited fossils without roots, mycorrhizas unknown
VAM-like with arbuscules in thallus (Stahl, 1949;
Ligrone, 1988; Turnau et al., 1999; Schüßler, 2000)
Silurian (415 – 425 Myr) to Present
Mosses (the largest living group of bryophytes)
No roots, NM or endophytic glomalean fungi
(Rabatin, 1980; Read et al., 2000)
Early Devonian (400 Myr)
Aglaophyton major: an early land plant of uncertain affinities
VAM-like arbuscules in specialised rhizome meristem
(Taylor et al., 1995)
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Devonian (395 Myr) to Present
Lycopods: Lycopodium, Selaginella, etc.
VAM in sporophyte, underground gametophyte may have
exploitative association (see text)
Devonian (395 Myr) to Present
Sphenophytes: Equisetum, etc.
Equisetum facultative VAM or NM (Koske et al., 1985;
Currah & van Dyk, 1986; Dhillion, 1993)
Mid Devonian (385 Myr) to Present
Sphenophytes, Lycopods, Pteridophytes plants
Pteridophytes (Ferns)
First plants with roots resembling those of modern
VAM, some facultative with fine roots and long hairs (see text)
Mid Devonian to Present
Cycads
VAM (Brundrett, 1999)
Triassic (215 – 235 Myr)
Cycad from Antarctica (Antarcticycas sp.)
Earliest fossil VAM association in roots (Phipps & Taylor, 1996)
Permian (265 Myr) to Present
Ginkgoales: Ginkgo, etc.
Tree with VAM (Bonfante-Fasolo & Fontana, 1985)
Triassic (235 Myr) to Present
Southern Hemisphere conifers: Araucariaceae, Podocarpaceae
Trees with VAM (Baylis et al., 1963; McGee et al., 1999)
Early Jurassic (190 Myr) to Present
Northern Hemisphere conifers (except Pinaceae):
Cupressaceae, Taxodiaceae, Taxales, etc.
Trees with VAM (Newman & Reddell, 1987; Harley & Harley,
1987; Brundrett et al., 1996; Smith & Smith, 1997)
Early Jurassic (190 Myr) to Present
Gnetales: Ephedra, Gnetum, Welwitschia
Welwitschia – VAM (Jacobson et al., 1993),
Gnetum – ECM (Fassi, 1957; St John, 1980)
Early Cretaceous? (120 Myr) to Present
Conifers in Pinaceae: Larix, Picea, Pinus, Tsuga, etc.
ECM trees with heterorhizic roots
(Noelle, 1910; Brundrett et al., 1990c)
Early Cretaceous (120 Myr) to Present
Angiosperms
See Fig. 3
Cretaceous (100 Myr) to Present
Fagales: Betulaceae, Casuarinaceae, Fagaceae,
Juglandaceae, Myricaceae, Nothofagaceae
Single lineage of ECM trees or shrubs with heterorhizic roots
(some VAM also) (Smith & Read, 1997; Brundrett, 1999)
Cretaceous (100 Myr) to Present
NM families: Proteaceae, Cyperaceae, Restionaceae, etc.
O ldest known fossils of plants likely to have NM roots
Late Cretaceous, O ligocene,
or Eocene to present (90 – 30 Myr)
Caesalpiniaceae, Fabaceae, Mimosaceae,
Myrtaceae, Salicaceae, Tiliaceae, etc.
Several separate ECM lineages (Smith & Read, 1997;
Alexander, 1989; Fitter & Moyersoen, 1996; Brundrett, 1999)
Cretaceous (100 Myr) to Present
O rchidaceae
Age estimate based on biogeography
and phylogenetics (Chase, 2001)
Late Cretaceous (80 Myr)
Ericalean plants
O ldest known fossils (Nixon & Crepet, 1993)
likely to have ericoid mycorrhizas (Cullings, 1996)
Review
Additional data on plant lineages and fossil histories are from Stewart and Rothwell (1993), Taylor and Taylor (1993), Kenrick and Crane (1997), Wing and Boucher (1998), Hill et al . (1999),
Renzaglia et al., 2000, Barrett & Wills. 2001. All dates are approximate. Abbreviations: VAM, vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal; ECM, ectomycorrhizal; NM, non-mycorrhizal.
Tansley review no. 134
© New Phytologist (2002) 154: 275 – 304
Table 4 The mycorrhizal status of major plant lineages, with approximate ages of lineages from fossil evidence and molecular plant phylogenies. The mycorrhizal status of lineages is primarily
derived from observation of living descendants with limited fossil evidence
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284 Review
Tansley review no. 134
have specifically evolved to grow within the narrow rhizoids
and confined spaces of bryophytes. Fine endophytes also
colonise roots of vascular plants in many habitats (e.g. Hall,
1977; Brundrett et al., 1999).
Liverwort rhizoids are also colonised by the fungi of ericoid
mycorrhizas in some ecosystems (Duckett & Read, 1995;
Chambers et al., 1999; Read et al., 2000). It is not known
how common liverwort colonisation by VAM or ericoid
mycorrhizal fungi is, or if they provide benefits to the plants.
T hese may be the oldest forms of balanced mycorrhizal association, or endophytic activity by mycorrhizal fungi. Evidence
for the former is provided by the presence of arbuscules, the
confinement of hyphae to specific tissues and the expression
of different hyphal morphologies in different tissues (Ligrone
& Lopes, 1989; Turnau et al., 1999). T hese morphological
adaptations by the host are only likely to evolve if associations
are beneficial (Section III). Several species of subterranean
achlorophyllous bryophytes apparently have exploitative mycorrhizas (Leake, 1994; Read et al., 2000).
2. Primitive plants
T he oldest fossil evidence of mycorrhizas is in the rhizomes of
early vascular plants, but it is quite likely that these associations started in the thallus of their bryophyte-like precursors.
T here are VAM-like hyphae, vesicles and arbuscules in fossil
rhizomes from the Devonian period onwards and spores
from the Ordovician onwards (Tables 1 and 3). T hese fungal
structures show a remarkable resemblance to modern VAM
associations (Stubblefield & Taylor, 1988; Taylor & Osborn,
1996).
Taylor et al. (1995) and Phipps & Taylor (1996) provide
the most detailed studies of mycorrhizas in rhizome fossils.
T he consistency and intensity of these associations is typical
of obligate VAM in living plants (Section VI). T he rhizomes
of Aglaophyton major, an Early Devonian land plant of uncertain affinities, contained arbuscules that were restricted to
a specialised cortical zone, with a meristem that apparently
extended the zone containing cells occupied by fungi. T his
meristem probably evolved to increase the capacity of Aglaophyton to control mycorrhizal fungi. However, it is not possible
conclusively to prove that early VAM–like associations were
mycorrhizal (Section II).
Sphenophytes, lycopodophytes and pteridophytes were the
first plants with roots, and arose in the Mid Devonian (Table 1).
T heir surviving descendants include Lycopodium, Selaginella
and Isoetes. T hese plants have a separate gametophyte phase
without roots and a sporophyte with roots and leaves (Foster
& Gifford, 1974). Schmid & Oberwinkler (1993) found an
unusual association in the subterranean gametophyte of a
Lycopodium species with some characteristics of VAM, but
without arbuscules and with very fine coiled hyphae that
were digested in cells. Gametophytes of another species of
Lycopodium are similar, but have arbuscule-like structures in
cells (Duckett & Ligrone, 1992). T he hyphae within these
gametophytes have similar ultrastructural features to VAM
fungi, but are extremely narrow, so are most likely to be a fine
endophyte (Read et al., 2000). T hese gametophytes probably
have exploitative VAM (Leake, 1994). Adult Lycopodium and
Selaginella sporophytes have normal VAM associations (Harley
& Harley, 1987; Gemma et al., 1992). Isoetes often has VAM,
even when growing as a submerged aquatic plant (BeckNielsen & Madsen, 2001).
Equisetum was in a separate order of vascular plants (sphenophytes), but recent phylogenetic research places them within
the ferns (Renzaglia et al., 2000; Pryer et al., 2001). Mycorrhizas
are unknown in the photosynthetic gametophytes of Equisetum,
but their sporophytes often have VAM with arbuscules, or
can be devoid of mycorrhizas (Table 4). T hese probably are
facultative associations, as Equisetum has fine roots and long
root hairs (M. Brundrett, unpublished).
Pteridophytes (ferns) dominated the world from the Silurian
to the Paleozoic and remain a major component of many ecosystems to this day (Rothwell, 1996). Most ferns have roots
with VAM, but many have relatively fine roots with long roots
hairs and limited or inconsistent mycorrhizal colonisation
(Table 4). T hese facultative mycorrhizal associations are considered to be a feature of relatively advanced ferns (the Filicales),
while more primitive ferns (such as Ophioglossum) typically
have relatively thick roots which are consistently mycorrhizal
(Boullard, 1979; Berch & Kendrick, 1982; Gemma et al., 1992;
Unrug & Turnau, 1999; Zhao, 2000). Myco-heterotrophic
VAM occur in the subterranean gametophytes of Ophioglossum
and Botrychium (Schmid & Oberwinkler, 1994; Read et al.,
2000). Epiphytic and epilithic ferns are less likely to be mycorrhizal than terrestrial ferns that grow in soil (M. Brundrett,
unpublished). Associations with coils formed by an unidentified ascomycete occur in the roots of some epiphytic ferns
(Schmid et al., 1995). T he report of ECM in a fern (Cooper,
1976) should be discounted as the anatomy of the illustrated
root closely resembles that of Fagus (Brundrett et al., 1990c)
and was probably a Nothofagus root that became incorporated
in the fibrous base of the fern.
T he whisk ferns Psilotum and Tmesipteris have no roots or
leaves and resemble early vascular plants (Foster & Gifford,
1974). However, cladistic analysis of combined morphological
and molecular data has shown that they are closely related to
the primitive ferns Ophioglossum and Botrychium which also
have subterranean gametophytes (Pryer et al., 2001). Psilotum
gametophytes have coiled, septate hyphae produced by an
unidentified fungus in subterranean gametophytes (Peterson
et al., 1981; Gemma et al., 1992). T his presumably would be
an exploitative VAM association, similar to that of Ophioglossum
and Botrychium gametophytes. Adult plants of Psilotum are
reported to have VAM with arbuscules in their rhizomes (Read
et al., 2000). The loss of roots and leaves in the whisk ferns may
have evolved because plants are myco-heterotrophic for part
of their life cycle.
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Tansley review no. 134
VAM and other
3. Gymnosperms
Both living and Triassic fossil cycads had VAM in roots
(Table 4). T he gymnosperm trees that dominated the Earth’s
forests in the Jurassic and Cretaceous included genera such as
Podocarpus, Araucaria, Agathis, Pyllocladus and Ginkgo with
VAM (Table 4). These VAM conifers have remained dominant
in some forests of the Southern Hemisphere. Gymnosperms,
other than Gnetum and members of the Pinaceae, generally
have VAM, but there are reports, such as the single ECM root
of Wollemia observed by McGee et al. (1999) and the occasional
ECM roots of Juniperus (Reinsvold & Reeves, 1986), that
require further investigation. No NM or myco-heterotrophic
gymnosperms are known.
Members of the Pinaceae have ECM (Table 4) and may
have evolved from gymnosperms with VAM, or the Gnetales
(Stewart & Rothwell, 1993). The Gnetales are a diverse assemblage of gymnosperms, including Welwitschia – with VAM,
and Gnetum – the only known non-Pinaceae gymnosperm
with ECM (Table 4). DNA sequence data shows that the
Gnetales and Pinaceae are closely related and that flowering
plants are not direct descendants of the Gnetales (Kenrick,
1999; Donoghue & Doyle, 2000). However, these phylogenetic relationships are not fully resolved due to conflicts
with morphological and fossil evidence (Doyle, 1998).
T he only true ECM fossils are from recent Middle Eocene
materials (LePage et al., 1997). Preserved imprints of roots
thought to belong to plants in the Podocarpaceae from the
Lower Cretaceous have characteristic short swollen lateral
roots called ‘mycorrhizal nodular roots’ (Cantrill & Douglas,
1988). T hese were interpreted as ECM by some, but this is
inconsistent with living podocarps that have VAM (Baylis
et al., 1963).
4. Angiosperms
Angiosperms probably arose in the Early Cretaceous (Stewart
& Rothwell, 1993; Taylor & Taylor, 1993). It is believed that
they initially occupied early successional habitats, as gymnosperms dominated the most productive plant communities
(Wing & Boucher, 1998). T he most primitive surviving
angiosperms include the Amborellaceae, Austrobaileyaceae,
Nymphaeaceae, Iliciaceae and Schisandreaceae (Kuzoff &
Gasser, 2000). T he mycorrhizal status of most of these basal
angiosperms has not been investigated, but Nymphaea has
VAM (Brundrett, 1999).
T he strongest evidence that VAM is the ancestral condition
for angiosperms is provided its near-ubiquitous occurrence in
them (Newman & Reddell, 1987; Trappe, 1987). Trappe (1987)
compiled data for 6507 angiosperm species, of which 67%
had VAM (including 12% considered to be facultative), 15%
had another association type and 18% were NM (Fig. 2).
Additional information for the UK flora (Harley & Harley,
1987), Hawaiian angiosperms (83% mycorrhizal – Koske
© New Phytologist (2002) 154: 275 – 304
Review
www.newphytologist.com
5%
Other types
Nonmycorrhizal
18%
15%
Facultative VAM
12%
VAM
50%
Fig. 2 Proportion of angiosperm species with different categories of
mycorrhizal associations using data from Trappe (1987).
et al., 1992) and Australian plants (Brundrett, 1999) based
primarily on plants from natural ecosystems have provided
similar results.
T he statement ‘90% of plants are mycorrhizal’ has been
widely presented in the literature, but is not based on scientific data. T he actual proportion of angiosperms known to be
mycorrhizal is somewhat lower than this (i.e. 82%). At the
ecosystem level, the dominant plants in most natural habitats
are mycorrhizal, but properties have rarely been determined
(Brundrett, 1991). T he relative cover of mycorrhizal plants in
ecosystems ranges from 100% (96% VAM, 4% ECM, < 1%
NM) in a Canadian deciduous forest (Brundrett & Kendrick,
1988) to 52% (35% VAM, 17% ECM, 45% NM) in an
Australian eucalypt forest (Brundrett & Abbott, 1995), or
40% VAM in a disturbed habitat (Barni & Siniscalco, 2000).
T his type of analysis would show that ECM associations are
far more important than indicated in taxonomic surveys, as
they dominate some ecosystems (Brundrett, 1991).
Angiosperm phylogenies based on multiple gene sequence
data (Soltis et al., 2000), have allowed mycorrhizal lineages to
be resolved (Fig. 3). T hese lineages include major clades (with
multiple families) and minor clades (with a few families or
genera) of plants with fairly consistent mycorrhizal associations.
It is probable that the evolution of ECM coincides with the
origin of the Fagales and Pinaceae in the Cretaceous (Table 3).
T he Fagales lineage includes the Betulaceae, Casuarinaceae,
Juglandaceae, Myricaceae, Nothofagaceae, and Fagaceae (Chen
et al., 1999), most of which have ECM roots (Table 3).
Angiosperms other than the Fagales have evolved ECM
independently (Table 4; Fig. 3). T hese include some members
of the Ericales and 11 families in 6 orders of the rosids. T he
highest frequency of ECM plants occurs in the rosid branch
of the eudicots, but these orders also include many families
of VAM plants, so they probably did not originate as ECM
clades (Fig. 3). Fitter & Moyersoen (1996) suggest that ECM
plants are concentrated in the rosids because there are many
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Tansley review no. 134
Basal Angiosperms1
Eumagnoliids2
Ceratophyllales3
*
Monocots
Angiosperms
Acorales
Alismatales
Asparagales*
Dioscoreales*
Liliales
Pandanales
Arecales
Poales
Commelinales
Zingiberales
4
Eudicots
Ranunculales
Proteales
Caryophyllales
Santalales
Saxifragales
Rosids
Core eudocots
Asterids
Key:
VAM only (if known)
Some ECM
Many ECM
Some NM
Many NM
VAM/Ericoid/ECM
VAM/orchid
*Some exploitative
woody plants in this lineage. Many rosids grow in cool climates
and soils with organic matter where ECM associations can
be most effective (Section VII). Plant families with nitrogen
fixing rhizobial or actinorhizal nodules are also concentrated
in the rosids (Gualtieri & Bisseling, 2000).
T he Dipterocarpaceae and Cistaceae are closely related
families in the Malvales that may share an ECM ancestor.
Several isolated lineages of ECM plants occur in otherwise NM
families: the sedges (Kobresia : Cyperaceae) in the Poales and
several genera in the Caryophyllales (Neea, Pisonia : Nyctaginaceae).
Numerous ECM lineages occur in the Myrtales and Fabales
(see below), but there likely also have been many reversions
back to VAM in these groups.
Geraniales
Malphigiales
Oxalidales
Fabales*
Rosales
Curcurbitales
Fagales
Myrtales
Brassicales
Malvales
Sapindales
Cornales
Ericales*
Garryales
Gentianales*
Lamiales
Solanales
Aquifoliales
Apiales
Asterales
Dipsacales
Fig. 3 Position of mycorrhizal lineages in a
simplified angiosperm family tree (after APG
(Angiosperm Phylogeny Group) (1988)
and Soltis et al . (2000)). Information
about the mycorrhizal status of families is
compiled from many sources. (Notes:
1, Amborellaceae, Nympheaceae, etc.;
2, Chloranthales, Piperales, Laurales,
Magnoliales and Winterales; 3, position of
family varies widely in trees; 4, several
unresolved monocot families with
exploitative mycorrhizas.)
T he Ericales have the most complex evolutionary trends,
starting from a VAM ancestor, progressing to ECM, then to
arbutoid ECM and culminating in ericoid mycorrhizas, or
exploitative ECM in myco-heterotrophs like Monotropa (Fig. 3).
Ericoid mycorrhizas occur in the Ericaceae and Epacridaceae,
but the latter is a clade within the former (Kron et al., 1999).
Fossil evidence suggests that plants with ericoid mycorrhizas
are at least 80 Myr old (Table 4). Phylogenetically, plants with
arbutoid ECM (Gaultheria, Arbutus, Pyrola) are the sister
group to the Ericaceae, with ericoid mycorrhizal plants as
their monophyletic descendants (Cullings, 1996). However,
Clethra (Clethraceae), which is basal to the remaining Ericales
(Cullings, 1996), has recently been shown to have VAM
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(Kubota et al., 2001), as does Actinidia (Actinidiaceae) their
closest known sister group (Calvet et al., 1989; Soltis et al.,
2000). T hus, the evolutionary sequence proposed by
Cullings (1996) should be modified to show VAM as the
basal state of the Ericales. Plants in the Ericaceae from Hawaii
have re-acquired VAM, presumably because ericoid fungi
were absent (Koske et al., 1990). Cullings (1996) suggests
that arbutoid mycorrhizas are intermediary between ECM
and ericoid associations as they have common features. T he
switch to a new fungal lineage was probably the key event in
the evolution of ericoid mycorrhizas, but the first ericoid
fungi may have also been an ECM associate (Vrålstad et al.,
2000).
The Proteaceae and Restionaceae were present 100 Myr ago
and may well have been some of the first plants with true NM
roots capable of excluding mycorrhizal fungi (Section VI.5).
T here are at least 10 lineages of NM plants in the angiosperms, but most also contain many VAM plants. T he Poales
clade contains many predominantly NM families (Cyperaceae,
Juncaceae, Xyridaceae, Restionaceae, etc.), but members of
the Poaceae usually have VAM. It is possible that their common ancestor was NM and grasses re-acquired the capacity
to host VAM. Alternatively, many Poales may have become
NM due to radiation into habitats where mycorrhizas are not
beneficial (Section VII). Families such as the Cyperaceae are
predominantly NM, but contain some members with VAM
(Table 2). Many of these ‘NM families’ also contain species
that have either re-acquired the capacity for mycorrhizal
formation, or never lost it entirely. It is likely that members of
many NM lineages are polyphyletic and many reversions back
to VAM have occurred (Section VII).
Families of predominantly NM plants include the Amaranthaceae, Brassicaceae, Caryophyllaceae, Chenopodiaceae,
Commelinaceae, Cyperaceae, Juncaceae, and Polygonaceae
(see lists in Tester et al., 1987; Brundrett, 1991). Phylogenetic
analysis shows that certain orders and families of plants are
much more likely to contain NM members (Fig. 3). Most NM
plants are herbaceous, but some are shrubs and trees (e.g.
Proteaceae). Major NM clades that appear to be monophyletic
include the Caryophyllales, Commelinales and Alismatales
(Fig. 3). However, the Alismatales include many aquatic plants
that may have independently lost their VAM due to root
reduction and habitat factors (Section VI.5). Examples of
minor clades of NM plants isolated within groups of VAM
plants include the Brassicaceae, Dasypogonaceae, Papaveraceae,
Proteaceae and Zygophyllaceae (Fig. 3). Lineages of parasitic
plants like the Santalales and Lamiales have many NM
members (Trappe, 1987; Lesica & Antibus, 1986), as do insectivorous plants in the Ericales and Lamiales (Lamont, 1982;
Brundrett, 1999). NM plants generally are most abundant in
harsh plant habitats, such as extremely wet, saline, or arid soils
(Brundrett, 1991). Many epiphytes also are NM, but others
have VAM, orchid or ericoid associations ( Janos, 1993; Gemma
& Koske, 1995). Unidentified ascomycetes in the roots of some
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Review
epiphytic ferns form an association that resembles ericoid
mycorrhizas (Schmid et al., 1995).
5. Partially or fully exploitative associations
Plants with exploitative mycorrhizas, which are called mycoheterotrophic or saprophytic, are considered to be fully reliant
on mycorrhizal fungi due to the lack of photosynthesis and
substantial roots (Björkman, 1960; Furman & Trappe, 1971;
Leake, 1994). T hese ‘achlorophyllous’ plants have very low
concentrations of photosynthetic pigments (Cummings &
Welschmeyer, 1998). Isotope tracer studies have demonstrated nutrient transfer to Monotropa (Björkman, 1960) and
Corallorhiza (McKendrick et al., 2000) from trees or tree
saplings, and transfer through hyphal connections was established for the latter. Leake (1994) provides a detailed account
of the biology of myco-heterotrophic plants.
Plants with exploitative mycorrhizas have many separate
lineages, demonstrating that increasing host control over
associations is one of the most important trends in mycorrhizal evolution (Section III). T hese associations originated in
several lineages of primitive plants including bryophytes and
the gametophytes of Lycopodium, Psilotum and Botrychium
(Section IV.2). Angiosperms with exploitative mycorrhizas
are listed in Table 4. Data summarised by Leake (1994) and
newer molecular phylogenies (Soltis et al., 2000) show three
separate origins for these associations in the dicots (Ericales,
Polygalaceae, Gentianaceae) and three or more origins in the
monocots (Burmanniaceae, Orchidaceae, Corsicaceae, Petrosaviaceae, Truridaceae) (Fig. 3). T he last three families remain
unresolved in phylogenetic analyses and may be examples
of convergent evolution. Cullings (1996) determined that
myco-heterotrophy evolved twice in the Ericales, but most are
monophyletic. Myco-heterotrophic angiosperms other than
the orchids or Ericales have exploitative coiling VAM, without
arbuscules in many cases (Table 2).
Molvray et al. (2000) show that myco-heterotrophy has
evolved separately approximately 20 times in the orchids –
more than in all other plants combined. It has been suggested
that orchids have a greater tendency to evolve these associations,
because they have myco-heterotrophic seedlings (Benzing &
Atwood, 1984; Molvray et al., 2000). Orchids also evolve
more rapidly than other plant families (higher rates of base
substitutions), so may switch to new strategies more often
(Molvray et al., 2000).
T he tiny seeds of orchids are considered to be fully dependent on mycorrhizal fungi for germination, but adult plants
are usually thought to be fully autotrophic (Hadley, 1982;
Rasmussen, 1995). However, evidence that mycorrhizas of
green orchids are partially exploitative is provided by 14C
transfer experiments, the survival of achlorophyllous mutants
of some orchid species, and the apparent below-ground persistence of other orchids for years (Alexander & Hadley, 1985;
Salmia, 1988; Rasmussen, 1995). T here is no evidence that
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Tansley review no. 134
fungi receive benefits from their associations with orchids
(Section II).
T he Apostasioids are considered to be the most primitive
Orchidaceae (Stern & Warcup, 1994; Kristiansen et al., 2001),
but are probably not typical of early orchids (Chase, 2001). Close
relatives of the orchids include the Asteliaceae, Blanfordiaceae,
Boryaceae, Hypoxidaceae and Lanariaceae (Chase, 2001).
Members of these families probably have VAM.
T he switch to a new type of mycorrhizal fungus associate
probably was the key defining event in the evolution of the
Orchidaceae at least 100 Myr ago (Table 4). Orchids may well
have evolved from an ancestor with a partially exploitative
VAM association, as these have anatomical and functional
similarities to orchid mycorrhizas (see below). T he evolution
of the orchid mycorrhizas is linked to extreme specialisation,
since abundant microscopic seeds are required for dispersal
into specialised habitats in patchy environments (Benzing &
Atwood, 1984; Rasmussen, 2000). T hese ‘dust seeds’, in turn
require myco-heterotrophic germination.
T he Orchidaceae and Gentianaceae have species with differing levels of dependence on mycorrhizas, extending from
fully autotrophic, balanced mycorrhizas to fully–heterotrophic,
exploitative associations (Leake, 1994). T he Gentianaceae
show an evolutionary series where the hyphal coil interface
gradually becomes more important, culminating in cases without any arbuscules (Schmid & Oberwinkler, 1994; Imhof,
1998, 1999b). Some members of the Gentianaceae require
companion plants to support their VAM fungi ( JacquelinetJeanmougin & Gianinazzi-Pearson, 1983; McGee, 1985;
Warcup, 1988). It seems likely that all mycorrhizal fungi may
have some capacity to support exploitative plants. For example,
VAM fungi can support growth of non-photosynthetic tobacco
plants growing in the presence of other plants (Müller & Dulieu,
1998).
6. The evolution of mycorrhizas continues
Plants within a genus usually have the same type of mycorrhiza
(ECM, VAM, etc.) or are NM, but there are many exceptions
to this rule (Harley & Harley, 1987; Newman & Reddell,
1987; Alexander, 1989; Brundrett, 1999). A survey of Australian
plants has provided insight into the consistency of mycorrhizas
in plant families (Brundrett, 1999). Mycorrhizal associations
are highly diverse in Australian plant families such as the
Myrtaceae and Fabaceae. For example, the Fabaceae tribe
Mirbelieae includes: plants with VAM; plants with dual ECM/
VAM; NM plants with cluster roots; and VAM plants with
cluster roots.
Genera with dual ECM/VAM associations include Alnus,
Acacia, Casuarina, Eucalyptus, Populus, Salix and Uapaca (Lodge
& Wentworth, 1990; Khan, 1993; Moyersoen & Fitter, 1998;
Chen et al., 2000). T he occurrence of two types of mycorrhizas in the same root system raises important questions
about the relative benefits they provide to plants (Lodge,
2000; van der Heijden, 2001). Some plants with dual ECM/
VAM probably have only recently evolved the capacity to host
ECM, as they have long thin, weakly dimorphic, relatively
unbranched short roots with a shallow mantle and Hartig net
(Brundrett et al., 1996). It can be difficult to designate these
associations using morphological criteria (MC Brundrett,
unpublished), but benefits from these associations have been
measured (McGee, 1988b). T he VAM in plants with dual
associations may be relictual (due to an inability to fully
exclude them), functional (providing greater or wider access
to nutrients), or a backup mechanism for situations when
inoculum of ECM fungi is limited. Evidence for the last
option is provided by plants with dual associations that only
have substantial amounts of VAM when growing in disturbed
habitats, flooded soils, or as young seedlings (Lapeyrie &
Chilvers, 1985; Lodge & Wentworth, 1990; Bellei et al.,
1992; Chen et al., 2000).
V. Evolution of roots
Most botanists believe that roots and stems are entirely
separate organ systems, although it should be noted that some
plants apparently have intermediate organs, that root-shoot
interconversion can occur, and that roots and shoots have many
shared developmental processes (Esau, 1965; Groff & Kaplan,
1988; Dolan & Scheres, 1998). Roots are morphologically
unique among plant organs because they have a bidirectional
meristem that produces both an apical root cap as well as the
subapical root tissues (Esau, 1965; Foster & Gifford, 1974).
It is likely that roots evolved from the subterranean stems
(rhizomes) of plants, as suggested in Fig. 4. An evolutionary
series can be recognised, starting with coarse dichotomous
branched roots (e.g. Selaginella), progressing to roots with an
apical cell and more organised branching (ferns, Equisetum),
continuing to gymnosperm roots with indistinct cell layers,
and ending with angiosperm roots with the most highly
organised cell layers and branching (Noelle, 1910; Foster &
Gifford, 1974). However, we cannot be certain that there is a
common ancestor for all plants with roots, or in which plant
lineage roots first arose (Gensel et al., 2001; Raven & Edwards,
2001). T he roots of the primitive living vascular plants, such
Isoetes, Lycopodium and Selaginella, are remarkably similar to
the typical roots of angiosperms except that Lycopodium lacks
an endodermis, and only Selaginalla has an exodermis with
Casparian bands (Damas et al., 1997).
T he first root-like fossils are from the Lower Devonian, but
may be intermediate structures, as they do not seem to have
a root cap (Gensel et al., 2001; Raven & Edwards, 2001). It
seems that true roots first appeared in several plant lineages
(lycopods and ferns) that arose in Mid Devonian times during
a period of rapid plant diversification and increasing complexity (Stewart & Rothwell, 1993; Taylor & Taylor, 1993;
Kenrick & Crane, 1997; Gensel et al., 2001). The mycorrhizal
status of these structures is unknown.
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Review
Thin stems
Stems
Thick
Stems
Rhizomes
Thick
Rhizomes
Plant
Thin
Rhizomes
Air
Leaves
Rhizoids
Coarse
Stems
Woody
Trunk
Soil
Fig. 4 Diagram summarising probable
stages in the evolution of stems, rhizomes,
leaves and roots from the thallus of an early
bryophyte-like land plant, using a
hypothetical final example with a woody
trunk.
Plant
Water
As plants colonised the land they would have faced powerful
selection pressure to increase the surface area of their absorptive
systems in soil in parallel with increases in their photosynthetic organs to acquire limiting mineral nutrients from soils.
T he evolution of roots most likely started by differentiation
of underground stems (rhizomes) into two specialised types:
thicker perennial stems that support above-ground structures,
propagate the plant, serve as storage organs, and form conduits to distribute water and nutrients; and thinner, longer
absorbing structures to house mycorrhizal fungi and exploit
a greater volume of soil (Fig. 4). T he thin structures would
have had to be replaced more often than thick stems, due to
environmental stresses. T he two types of underground stems
would have continued to diverge, due to the selection pressures
described above, by evolving separate phenologies, growth
patterns, and structures, with most differentiation occurring
in the thinner rhizomes. Evolutionary modifications to thick
stems would include protective features that reduce permeability and exclude fungi, after mycorrhizal formation and
nutrient absorption were no longer required. Root hairs
probably evolved from the rhizoids of earlier plants to increase
contact with the soil. At some stage the thinner, absorptive
subterranean stems would have become roots. Support for the
theory that roots gradually evolved from shoots is provided
by the fact that many of the same genetic mechanisms are
involved in the formation of these organs (Dolan & Scheres,
1998). An alternative theory that roots originated suddenly,
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Coarse
Roots
Fine roots
as a result of an infection by an agrobacterium-like organism
has also been proposed (Harper et al., 1991), but is highly
improbable since this could only provide a small fraction of
the genes required to form roots (Chriqui et al., 1996).
Roots have continued to progressively evolve into a hierarchy of structures (branch orders), with the finest elements
becoming progressively thinner and more diffuse. T his structural heterogeneity culminates in fine high-order lateral roots
that explore the soil volume. T hese are most highly developed
in angiosperms with NM roots (Section VI). Low-order lateral
roots are a more-permanent network used for mechanical
support, production of fine roots and transport. Probable
stages in the evolution of roots from rhizomes are summarised
below:
1 Dimorphic subterranean rhizome systems evolve in response
to the conflict between optimum designs for nutrient uptake,
mycorrhiza formation, mechanical support and survival.
2 Some stems become thinner and longer to increase contact
with the soil and absorptive capacity. T hese also grow faster,
have a shorter lifespan and evolve a separate phenology.
3 Other rhizomes remain thick and evolve more protective
features to limit permeability and facilitate long-term survival
in soil.
4 Mycorrhizal formation is restricted to the thin rhizomes,
which grow when fungi are active and can be renewed as
required to provide sufficient habitat for mycorrhizas to meet
plant nutrient requirements.
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VI. The root as a habitat for fungi
Most of our knowledge of roots comes from studies of crops
selected from weedy ancestors for rapid growth in highly
fertile soils. Roots of annual crops can grow 1 cm or more a
day and live for a few weeks or months (Russell, 1977), but
roots of plants in natural ecosystems are likely to grow 1 mm
or less a day and often live for years (Lyr & Hoffmann, 1967;
Brundrett & Kendrick, 1988, 1990a). Perennial plants typically
also have much more root structural diversity than annual
plants (Brundrett & Kendrick, 1988). T he cortex is usually
protected by an exodermis with suberised and/or lignified
walls forming a permeability barrier that probably also
provide greater structural strength, drought tolerance, and
reduced nutrient and water loss (Brundrett & Kendrick,
1988; Peterson, 1988; Perumalla et al., 1990). T he development of structural features is greatest in long-lived roots, but
would increase their production costs and may restrict nutrient
acquisition (Table 5).
T he cortex is the largest organ of most primary roots but
only seems to have an active role when roots are mycorrhizal
(Fig. 5). With few exceptions (bryophytes, gametophytes,
some orchids and myco-heterotrophs), plants only form
mycorrhizas within a living root cortex or epidermis. Most
cortex cells are highly vacuolated, unless occupied by a mycorrhizal fungus, in which case there is a many-fold increase in
cytoplasm volume (Alexander et al., 1989; Smith & Smith,
1990). T he root cortex is also important for storage and
transport, but these roles seem to require less volume, as
cortex reduction typically follows the loss of mycorrhizas
(see below).
T he selection forces driving root evolution summarised in
Table 5 primarily result from soil properties and would have
started to act on plants when they left the water (Section III).
In particular, soil immobilises nutrients, is prone to desiccation,
and has mechanical impedance (Russell, 1977). Optimum
design solutions to overcome these factors are often in conflict,
so modern plants have evolved a range of different solutions
to these challenges. For example, a root system optimised for
nutrient uptake via mycorrhizas would be very different to
one optimised for water uptake (Table 5).
1. Control of VAM
Structural features of roots that influence VAM formation are
listed in Table 6. VAM fungi are attracted to young roots by
soluble or volatile exudates including secondary metabolites
like flavanoids (Giovannetti & Sbrana, 1998). Initial penetration of roots typically occurs in a zone where the exodermis is
developing, so these fungi may be attracted to susceptible
roots by phenolics involved in suberin synthesis (Brundrett &
Kendrick, 1990b; Douds et al., 1996). However, these signals
are not essential, as root colonisation by VAM fungi is similar
in roots without an exodermis.
Table 5 Selection forces driving the evolution of root form
Factor
O ptimal root design
Habitat for VAM
ⵧ
ⵧ
ⵧ
Thick roots maximise cortex area available for VAM fungi
A long life-span and well-protected cortex
Relatively slow root growth balanced with fungal activity
Habitat for ECM
ⵧ
Dimorphic with short, highly branched, slow growing laterals
Direct uptake of immobile nutrients
ⵧ
ⵧ
ⵧ
Long, fine and highly branched roots (extensive)
Rapid growth and frequent replacement of roots (active)
Absorb solutes and release exudates freely through root periphery
(permeable)
Water and mobile nutrient uptake
ⵧ
ⵧ
The surface area and age and distribution patterns in soil of roots
are likely to be important
Mass flow of water driven by transpiration in leaves
Absorption of apoplast-mobile elements such as Ca
ⵧ
Young roots with permeable tips required at times of shoot growth?
Cost minimisation
ⵧ
ⵧ
ⵧ
Coarse and long-lived
Resistant to predation and stress
Limited exudation
Mechanical support of shoot
ⵧ
Strong and thick, highly lignified roots
Resistance to predators and pathogens
ⵧ
ⵧ
ⵧ
ⵧ
Physical defences: coarse and strong roots
Barriers (suberin lignin –1 tannins–1 ) in cell walls of the root periphery
Passive chemical defences: accumulation of protective secondary
metabolites in cells
Active defensive responses
ⵧ
Coarse, strong and impermeable with outer barriers
Tolerance to adverse soil conditions
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EXODERMIS
- entry
- protection
- permeability
Fig. 5 Anatomical evidence that roots
evolved as habitats for mycorrhizal fungi. This
diagrammatic summary illustrates typical
features of angiosperm plants and only
concerns vesicular–arbuscular mycorrhizas.
Cortex
Review
EPIDERMIS
- attraction
- entry
- protection
- exchange
CORTEX
- habitat
- guide
- exchange
ENDODERMIS
- barrier
- permeability
Table 6 Root morphology characteristics which influence mycorrhiza formation
Association
Anatomical feature
Influence on mycorrhizas
VAM
Cortex air channels
Cortex cell properties
Epidermis and hypodermis structure
Endodermal cells
Root system architecture
Hyphal distribution and growth rates
Arbuscule distribution
Appressoria position and path of root penetration
limit inward fungal growth
Efficiency of mycorrhiza formation (Table 7)
ECM
Cell walls in hypodermis or cortex
Root growth rate
Depth of Hartig net hyphae
Mycorrhiza formation
VAM are only initiated near the apex of young roots
(Hepper, 1985; Brundrett & Kendrick, 1990a; Smith et al.,
1992). Suberised exodermal cells regulate root penetration
by VAM fungus hyphae (Table 6), which typically occurs
before they suberise completely, or else occurs through specialised ‘passage cells’ in a dimorphic exodermis (Brundrett &
Kendrick, 1990a,b). A dimorphic exodermis has alternating
completely suberised long cells and short (passage) cells with
suberin only in their radial walls (Shishkoff, 1987; Peterson,
1988). T here are many reports of mycorrhizal fungi penetrating roots through short cells (e.g. Matsubara et al., 1999).
Some plants with VAM (e.g. Acer, Ulmus, Podocarps) have
dimorphic roots (called beaded roots) that can superficially
resemble ECM (Baylis et al., 1963; Duhoux et al., 2001). Beads
occur when fine laterals are divided into short segments by
constrictions due to suberin deposition (metacutinization)
occurring in root cap cell walls when growth is interrupted
(Baylis et al., 1963; Kessler, 1966; Brundrett et al., 1990c).
Beaded roots probably evolved because plants only required a
small cortex volume to form mycorrhizas at any one time and
had long-lived roots encased in suberin for protection.
Gallaud (1905) observed that VAM associations in different plant species conformed to two distinct morphology types
© New Phytologist (2002) 154: 275 – 304
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that he named the Arum and Paris series after two host plants.
In roots with linear (Arum series) VAM, hyphae proliferate in
the cortex by growing longitudinally between host cells, while
in coiling (Paris series) VAM, hyphae spread primarily by coils
within cells (see Fig. 1.11 of Brundrett et al., 1996). T his patterns arise because linear hyphae grow through longitudinally
continuous air spaces when these are present and coils result
otherwise (Brundrett et al., 1985). Aerenchyma formation is
greatest in roots growing in waterlogged soil (Armstrong,
1979), reducing the cortex volume that would be available for
mycorrhizal fungi. T here is an evolutionary trend for root loss
in fully aquatic plants resulting in nutrient uptake through
leaves (Sculthorpe, 1967). Mycorrhiza formation may be the
most important evolutionary factor determining the presence
of absence of air channels in roots, as the widespread occurrence of plants without them suggests that soil aeration is not
a problem in most habitats.
Coiling VAM associations were once considered to be
unusual, but both types are widely distributed in the plant
kingdom (Smith & Smith, 1997). Coiling VAM is most common in bryophytes, ferns and gymnosperms, and thus is most
likely to be their ancestral condition (Smith & Smith, 1997).
However, it has also been suggested coiling VAM is more
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Tansley review no. 134
advanced than linear VAM, since the former seems to allow
the plant greater host control of the fungus and occurs in
the most highly evolved myco–heterotrophic associations
(Brundrett & Kendrick, 1990a,b; Imhof, 1999b). Mycorrhizal
colonisation is most rapid and efficient in plants with linear
VAM, but this may result in greater energy cost to the plant
(Brundrett & Kendrick, 1990a,b). Experiments have demonstrated that the same fungus can form both types of association in different hosts and substantial growth responses result
from both (Gerdemann, 1965). T here also are morphological
patterns of VAM associated with particular fungi (Abbott,
1982; Merryweather & Fitter, 1998). T he importance of variations in VAM morphology are discussed elsewhere (Smith &
Smith, 1997; MC Brundrett, unpublished).
T he apoplastic (noncytoplasmic) space in the VAM root
cortex is often delimited by the endodermis and exodermis
(Fig. 5), which probably control solute transport into the
mycorrhizal exchange zone and limit root exudation (allowing
greater resources for mycorrhizal fungi). T he exodermis also
helps protect inactive fungi in roots as a reservoir of inoculum.
T he endodermis delimits the inward spread of VAM fungi,
but is unlikely to be a physical barrier, as VAM formation
often preceeds suberin lamellae deposition, and these fungi
cross passage cells with similar Casparian bands in the exodermis
(Brundrett & Kendrick, 1990a,b). Abrupt changes in solutes
or dissolved gases may prevent mycorrhizal fungi from crossing the endodermis.
2. Control of ECM
Ectomycorrhizal roots are elaborate structures that require
time to develop, so the growth rates of lateral roots must be
slow enough to allow fungi time to form associations (Chilvers
& Gust, 1982). Like VAM, the interface of ECM degenerates
after a few weeks, so renewal of roots would be required to
maintain nutrient transfer (Downes et al., 1992). Consequently,
each lineage of plants with ECM has independently evolved
dimorphic (heterorhizic) root systems with short roots characterised by limited apical growth and high branching densities
(Wilcox, 1964; Kubíková, 1967; Brundrett et al., 1990c).
Within a host plant, the degree of branching in ECM short
roots varies with different mycorrhizal fungi (Godbout &
Fortin, 1985; Newton, 1991). It is thought that plant growth
regulators supplied by the ECM fungus influence root swelling, extension and branching, as these chemicals can induce
similar changes in the absence of fungi (Kaska et al., 1999).
T hese root architecture trends are dramatically illustrated by
hosts with dual associations which have much lower specific
root length when growing with ECM fungi than when they
associate with VAM fungi (Chen et al., 2000). A substantial
proportion of the root system of woody plants consists of
older roots with a periderm that cannot form mycorrhizas
(Lyr & Hoffman, 1967).
T here are considerable variations in the structure and
function of ECM roots formed by different fungi with one
host plant (Agerer, 1995). T his results is a continuum of
increasing ECM root biomass and structural complexity,
starting with diffuse superficial associations (Section IV.6),
and culminating in tuberculate ECM associations with highly
branched and compact roots (Trappe, 1965; Haug et al.,
1991; Brundrett et al., 1996). T his evolutionary complexity
continuum reflects increasing investment in mycorrhizal associations by both the plant and fungus that would only occur
if these partnerships are essential.
Root anatomy can have a substantial impact on ECM
morphology (Table 6; see Fig. 1.12 of Brundrett et al. (1996)
for illustrations). Associations of angiosperms like Eucalyptus,
Betula, Populus, Fagus and Shorea have a Hartig net confined
to epidermal cells, while the Hartig net of gymnosperms
like Pinus extends into the cortex (Alexander & Högberg,
1986; Kottke & Oberwinkler, 1986; Massicotte et al., 1987).
Angiosperms with a cortical Hartig net are rare, but Dryas is
an exception (Melville et al., 1987). Epidermal ECM roots
often have an exodermis, but it may not become suberised
until after the Hartig net forms, so other aspects of the
composition of walls in this cell layer probably block hyphal
penetration (Ling-Lee et al., 1977; Brundrett et al., 1990c).
In some gymnosperms the penetration of Hartig net hyphae
into the inner cortex is stopped by cells with thickened walls
(Brundrett et al., 1990c), or changes in the carbohydrate composition of cell walls (Nylund, 1987).
T he suberised exodermis in epidermal ECM roots can be a
permeability barrier controlling passage of solutes into and
out of the Hartig net zone, and the fungal mantle can also be
a solute barrier (Vesk et al., 2000). T he mantle structure varies
considerably with different colonising fungi (Agerer, 1995)
and may often be to diffuse to influence root permeability.
Proteins secreted on the surface of hyphae called hydrophobins
are one factor likely to influence fungal sheath permeability
(Tagu et al., 2001), but secretions that cement hyphae together
seem more important (Vesk et al., 2000). Some plants have
a relatively thin Hartig net on epidermal cells with wall
ingrowths (transfer cells), while other hosts have swollen roots
with enlarged epidermal cells without wall ingrowths in the
interface zone (Ashford & Allaway, 1982; Massicotte et al.,
1987). Hosts with an epidermal Hartig net, such as Quercus
and Betula species, usually have a relatively narrow cortex with
cells that can be massively lignified (see Fig. 1.12 in Brundrett
et al. (1996)), perhaps as an adaptation to withstand hydraulic
pressure.
Many angiosperm plant lineages with ECM have independently evolved from plants with VAM (Fig. 3), but all
show convergent evolution in root morphology, resulting in
dimorphic root systems, thickened short roots, Hartig net
epidermal cell enlargement and a thin strengthened cortex.
Associations with epidermal and cortical Hartig nets are two
fundamentally different categories of ECM, and it should not
be assumed that they are functionally equivalent. As is the case
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with linear and coiling categories of VAM, the same fungus
can form both types of ECM with different hosts (Massicotte
et al., 1989). The epidermal associations probably arose because
most angiosperm families with ECM had an exodermis with walls
that resisted hyphal penetration, while gymnosperms did not
have this layer. However, the ECM morphology of gymnosperm
roots could also result from the absence of a clearly organised
epidermal layer (Noelle, 1910; Brundrett et al., 1990c).
3. O ther types of mycorrhizas
Orchid mycorrhizal associations have hyphal coils in host cells
with few morphological signs that the fungi are specialised
root inhabitants, in contrast with VAM and ECM which
have host–fungus interface of highly specialised hyphae.
Many orchids have very coarse roots with limited branching.
Extreme examples are provided by autotrophic genera of West
Australian terrestrial orchids, such as Pterostylis and Caladenia
with few or no roots, that form mycorrhizas in a short stem
segment just below the soil surface (Ramsay et al., 1986).
T hese orchids grow in highly infertile soils where it would be
impossible for them to acquire sufficient mineral nutrients
without mycorrhizal fungi. Myco-heterotrophic orchids usually
have highly reduced roots (Leake, 1994).
Ericoid mycorrhizas have coils of relatively undifferentiated
hyphae like those of orchid mycorrhizas, but occur within
extremely narrow ‘hair roots’ (Smith & Read, 1997). These roots
have no cortex and have mycorrhizal associations in epidermal
cells. Hair roots are even finer than the ultimate lateral roots
of most facultatively mycorrhizal or NM plants (see below),
but their capacity to absorb nutrients directly is not known.
4. Roots of facultatively mycorrhizal plants
Plant species generally have either: consistently high levels of
mycorrhizas; intermediate, or variable levels of mycorrhizas;
or are not mycorrhizal ( Janos, 1980; Trappe, 1987; Brundrett,
1991). T hese categories of plants are designated as obligately
mycorrhizal, facultatively mycorrhizal, or nonmycorrhizal (NM),
respectively, to reflect varying degrees of benefits received
from mycorrhizal associations (see Janos, 1980; Brundrett,
1991; Marschner, 1995). Facultative mycorrhizal plants are
balanced plant–fungus associations, but the benefits to plants
are conditional on soil fertility (MC Brundrett, unpublished).
Roots of NM plants are considered separately below.
T he root-shoot ration of plants is regulated by source-sink
carbon flow relationships and hormonal means (Farrar &
Jones, 2000). The uptake of relatively immobile elements such
as phosphorus by plants is dependant on the surface area of
their absorbing structures in the soil, but the uptake of water
and more mobile nutrients is less dependant on surface area
(Russell, 1977; Marschner, 1995). Mineral nutrients (especially
phosphorus and nitrogen) are amongst the most important limiting factors for plant growth in natural ecosystems
© New Phytologist (2002) 154: 275 – 304
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Review
(Brundrett, 1991), and provide most of the benefits of
mycorrhizal associations measured in experiments (Marschner,
1995; Smith & Read, 1997).
T he main role of mycorrhizal associations is to acquire
nutrients by exploring the soil volume with hyphae that are
both more responsive and more extensive than the roots
themselves (Harley, 1989). However, some plants have highly
branched, fine, long roots with numerous root hairs that
are also capable of effectively exploring large soil volumes
and responding to temporary soil resources (Baylis, 1975;
Manjunath & Habte, 1991; Schweiger et al., 1995; Koide et al.,
2000). T hese diffuse root systems are typical of plants in
natural habitats with low levels of mycorrhizal colonisation,
while highly mycorrhizal plants tend to have coarse root systems
(Brundrett & Kendrick, 1988; Hetrick et al., 1992; Fitter &
Moyersoen, 1996). Plants at the obligate mycorrhizal end of
this continuum also tend to have roots that grow more slowly
and live longer and thus would not be responsive to changes
in nutrient availability (Table 7). Coarse roots typically live
longer than fine roots (Eissenstat, 1992). The capacity of plants
to respond to small, temporary changes in water or nutrient
availability by growing new roots is an important determinant
of their competitive ability (St. John et al. 1983, Fitter & Hay,
1987; Graham et al., 1991). Assuming that soil nutrient levels
are not unusually high and inoculum of appropriate mycorrhizal fungi are available, the root features listed in Table 7 will
determine the magnitude of benefits plants receive from their
mycorrhizas. Plants with facultative associations would not be
able to support both high levels of mycorrhizal colonisation
and fine/active root systems, because of the high metabolic
cost that would result. T he diffuse nature and shorter lifespan
of fine root systems is likely to equate to much higher construction costs.
5. The divergence of roots of nonmycorrhizal plants
Only a brief discussion of this complex topic is provided
here and readers should consult other reviews for more
information (Tester et al., 1987; Brundrett, 1991; Koide &
Schreiner, 1992; Giovannetti & Sbrana, 1998). T hese plants
normally have fine, active, extensive roots systems like those
of facultative plants (Table 7). Some NM plants have evolved
specialised root systems, such as cluster roots, which secrete
organic compounds to modify the pH of the rhizosphere in
order to increase nutrient availability, as well as dauciform and
sand-binding roots, whose functions are less certain (Lamont,
1982; Marschner, 1995; Skene, 1998). Pemberton et al. (2001)
found several different patterns of root hair production occur
in eudicots, and one type where hairs occur in linear files,
primarily occurred in the Caryophyllales and Brassicales, suggesting this type of root hair formation evolved in NM plants.
T he principle characteristic of the roots of NM plants is
the capacity to exclude glomalean fungi. Factors in the rhizosphere of non-host plants inhibit spore germination, hyphal
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Mycorrhizal dependency continuum
Typical trends of root features
High
Low
Surface area of absorbing rootsa
1. Root length/ biomass ratio b
2. Lateral root branching orders
3. Branching frequency
4. Root hairs
Low
Low
Few
Sparse
Few/ short
High
High
More
Frequent
Many long −1
Root system activity
1. Root growth
2. Responsivenessc
Low
Slow
Slow
High
Fast
High
Root lifespan (in primary growth)
Protective features
1. Structurald
2. Chemicale
Rhizosphere influencesf
Root activity at low temperature
Formation of mycorrhizas
Months/ years
Weeks/ months
Well developed
Relatively primitive
Slight
Usually stops
Efficient
Well regulated
Weakly developed
Relatively advanced
May occur
O ften considerable
Inefficient
May be inhibited
Table 7 Generalised relationships between
features of root systems and the mycorrhizal
dependency of plants (after Brundrett, 1991)
Notes: a, relative to plant biomass; b, specific root length; c, roots respond to temporary
or localised soil conditions; d, suberisation or lignification of primary root structures;
e, accumulated secondary metabolites may be relatively primitive (tannins, etc.) or advanced
(alkaloids, cyanogens, etc.); f, that influence the availability of soil nutrients.
growth and appressoria formation by VAM fungi, and these
roots rarely contain arbuscules (Tommerup, 1984; Koide &
Schreiner, 1992; Fontenla et al., 1999). Roots of NM plants
are less attractive to VAM fungi, but some of these fungi still
attempt colonisation, forming abortive appressoria on the
surface of their roots (Douds et al., 1996; Giovannetti & Sbrana,
1998). It has also been suggested that non-host roots fail to
trigger fungal genes responsible for symbiotic interactions
(Giovannetti & Sbrana, 1998), but it seems more likely that
fungi attempt to go through the normal stages in mycorrhizal
formation and are blocked by defence reactions of non-host
roots. Clearly visible wounding reactions at attempted entry
points occur in NM roots of some plants (Allen et al., 1989).
Further evidence for the role of defence reactions is provided by the existence of NM mutants of mycorrhizal plants
(Giovannetti & Sbrana, 1998; Wegel et al., 1998; Gao et al.,
2001). T hese mutants block most VAM fungi in peripheral
layers of their roots, but some fungi can produce arbuscules in
the cortex, demonstrating that the greatest impact is on early
events in VAM formation (Wegel et al., 1998; Gao et al., 2001).
Presumably, both mutants and true NM plants have the same
defence response to mycorrhizal fungi that they would have
to pathogens that attempt to colonise roots. T hese defences
seem to decline in effectiveness with time as endophytic
growth by VAM hyphae is common in older roots of NM
plants (Brundrett, 1991). T hese defences can also be switched
off by a sublethal herbicide dose (Schwab, 1982). Some host
plants also have the capacity to block colonisation by mycorrhizal fungi in highly fertile soils, apparently by a wounding
response in exodermal cells (Mosse, 1973).
Root chemistry is the key to understanding NM plants,
which often accumulate chemicals, such as alkaloids and cyanogenic glucosinolates, considered to be evolutionarily advanced
(Brundrett, 1991; Koide & Schreiner, 1992; Vierheilig et al.,
2000). T his contrasts with mycorrhizal plants that are more
likely to contain primitive chemical components, such as
phenolics, that may be used by mycorrhizal fungi to detect
susceptible roots (Brundrett, 1991; Douds et al., 1996;
Giovannetti & Sbrana, 1998). T he potential role of secondary
metabolites in regulating mycorrhizal relationships would
depend on many factors that could influence their effectiveness
(Brundrett, 1991; Vierheilig et al., 2000). Mechanisms for the
exclusion of mycorrhizal fungi from NM plant roots are worthy
of further investigation and may include a wide range of
potent antifungal agents that await discovery (Brundrett, 1991).
Plants in NM families typically grow in harsh or disturbed
habitats where mycorrhizal fungi would be of limited benefit, due to soil conditions such as waterlogging or salinity
(Trappe, 1987; Brundrett, 1991; Allen et al., 1995; Fitter &
Moyersoen, 1996). In these cases the exclusion of mycorrhizal
fungi would conserve energy (Section VII). NM plants would
typically expend more energy on root activity than mycorrhizal species, but are not supporting a fungus.
Probable stages in NM plant evolution from facultatively
mycorrhizal plants with suitable roots for direct nutrient
uptake are listed below. It is likely that several stages are
involved in the evolution of NM plants and the first stage may
be rapid, while the second and third would be much slower.
T hus there could be several different types of NM plants with
differing mechanisms and capacities for excluding fungi.
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1 One or more mutations result in the loss of recognition
mechanisms for mycorrhizal fungi, so attempted mycorrhizal
formation activates defence reactions to fungal invasion. These
plants may not be fully NM.
2 Plants gradual evolve potent new defences against fungi,
often by accumulating antifungal chemicals, to increase their
capacity to efficiently exclude both mycorrhizal and pathogenic fungi from roots.
3 Roots loose ‘primitive’ structural and chemical defences that
are no longer required.
6. Conclusions
Each type of mycorrhiza is associated with a characteristic
type of root system. Coarse, slow growing, long-lived, relatively
thick roots are typical of plants with obligate VAM associations
and are most common in the plant kingdom. Convergent
evolution of plants with facultative mycorrhizas results in
much finer and more active roots than plants with obligate
mycorrhizas. Facultatively mycorrhizal plants have sacrificed
root cortex volume to attain greater surface area and a greater
capacity to explore the soil. T hese plants have traded efficient
mycorrhizal associations for the capacity to grow without
them in fertile soils, but still benefit from mycorrhizas in
infertile soils. Fungi would have to expend more energy
forming associations in these highly diffuse root systems,
because of an increased number of entry points for mycorrhizal fungi relative to the cortex space they occupy. T he root
growth of mycorrhizal plants cannot greatly exceed the
growth capacity of soil hyphae. T hus, the evolution of roots
of mycorrhizal plants would be constrained by the need to
form efficient associations.
Early land plants without roots probably had a limited
ability to regulate fungal associations (Section III). Roots allow
plants greater control over mycorrhizal fungi by confining
them in certain cell layers and controlling the timing of their
formation (Section V). Plants ultimately control the extent
of mycorrhizal formation by regulating root growth and
turnover (Tisserant et al., 1996). T hus, active mycorrhizal
associations will only occur during periods of root growth.
Most perennial plants only replace a fraction of their roots
each year. T his would prevent energy expenditure above what
is required to meet current demands for nutrients.
Some plants with fine root systems have evolved the capacity to exclude mycorrhizal fungi from their roots and become
NM plant lineages. T he chemical and structural divergence of
NM roots suggests that the evolution of root properties in
mycorrhizal plants has been restricted by the need to remain
compatible with mycorrhizal fungi. Mycorrhizal plants cannot
evolve potent new defences against fungal pathogens if these
also inhibit mycorrhizal fungi. It is not known how plants
with one type of mycorrhiza exclude fungi of other types
when they occur together, or how strong are the preferences
of fungi for roots of their host plants.
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VII. Mycorrhizal evolution trends
Figure 6 attempts to chart the evolutionary history (direction
and frequency of switching) for all existing types of mycorrhizas. All other types of mycorrhizal associations are ultimately
derived from plants with VAM, but some have passed through
several intermediate stages. Overall, the most common changes
in mycorrhizal status are from VAM to facultative VAM, then
to NM, or from VAM, to dual ECM/VAM, then to ECM.
T he reverse situation, where ECM or NM roots re-acquire
VAM appears to be uncommon. However, several plant lineages
may have reversions back to an ancestral condition, such as
mycorrhizal plants in NM plant lineages (Section IV.7), suggesting they retained or re-acquired the capacity for mycorrhiza
formation. Plants with a new type of mycorrhiza would retain
the capacity to host their first association for some time, as is
the case of plants with dual ECM/VAM (Section IV.6).
Evolutionary trends in mutualism/symbiosis appear to be
much more complex than models and theoretical discussions
would suggest. Evolution has resulted in consistent mycorrhizas in most plant families, but there are exceptions to this
generalisation such as families of plants that seem to be in a
transitional state between ECM and VAM (Section IV.6).
Some lineages of plants that started with one type of association have diverged in several separate directions (Fig. 6). For
example, many plants with VAM have close relatives with
NM or ECM roots, and some families have highly complex
mycorrhizal relationships (Section IV.5). Plants that switch
mycorrhiza types seem to be more likely to switch again and
would already have many of the capacities required by to form
mycorrhizas (Section IV). Plants use some of the same genes
to regulate nitrogen fixing and mycorrhizal associations
(Bonfante & Perotto, 1995; Gualtieri & Bisseling, 2000), and
some of these mechanisms are also likely to be shared between
several types of mycorrhizas. Many lineages of exploitative
mycorrhizas have originated from plants with VAM, arbutoid
ECM or orchid mycorrhizas (Section IV.5).
Mycorrhizal evolution can be summarised by contrasting
the oldest association (VAM) with more recently evolved
associations to look for general trends. Increasing control of
associations by the host along with increasing interface
complexity is the strongest evolutionary trend (Section VI),
but host and habitat specificity of fungi also often increases
with time (Section II). Facultative mycorrhizas, where plants
become less dependent on fungi, and exploitative associations,
where plants become more dependent on fungi, occupy the
opposite poles of an evolutionary continuum, with balanced
associations in the centre.
T he need for compatibility with slowly evolving VAM
fungi apparently constrained root structural and chemical
evolution for most plant species (Section VI). Evolutionary
advances in root morphology result in greater control of
fungi and their confinement to smaller zones within plants,
culminating in the reduced organs of plants with exploitative
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Fig. 6 Summary of mycorrhizal lineages of plants and fungi and the mycorrhizal dependency of plants. Approximate numbers of new plant
lineages are shown beside arrows. Boxes and arrow widths are not to scale. (PE = partially exploitative).
mycorrhizas (Section VI). In ECM this trend starts with dual
VAM /ECM and culminates in some of the most complex
of all mycorrhizal associations (Section IV.2). Each type of
mycorrhiza has characteristic root morphology (Section VI).
Convergent evolution has resulted in dimorphic roots for
plants with ECM, and extensive roots with long root hairs for
facultatively mycorrhizal or NM plants.
Four different evolutionary categories of fungi can be recognised (Section II). T he Glomales are a single unique ancient
lineage, in contrast with other fungi that have multiple origins
and coevolve with plants much more rapidly. Some plants
may continue to acquire new fungal lineages. Most lineages of
mycorrhizal fungi arise from saprophytes with enzymes that
can penetrate plant cell walls that presumably first became
endophytes after attraction to roots by exudates (Section III).
New types of mycorrhizas do not always result from the
adoption of new lineages of fungi, as some myco-heterotrophs
exploit ECM fungi or saprophytes (Section II). Orchid mycorrhizal fungi may not benefit from associations with orchids
and thus would not coevolve with plants, or form separate
lineages from their saprophytic or parasitic relatives. T he
nature of ericoid fungi is also uncertain (Section II).
T heoretical models of symbiotic evolution are based on
animal systems with vertical transmission (codispersal) that evolve
from parasitic interactions (Genkai-Kato & Yamamura, 1999).
However, phylogenetic studies show that most mycorrhizal
fungi do not have parasitic ancestors (Section II). T hey also
lack vertical transmission, since their inoculum is present in
most soils, they efficiently disperse into new habitats (Lu
et al., 1999), or can occur without host plants. Plants with
ECM tend to have large seeds that are likely to recruit near
their parents where fungi would already be present (similar to
vertical transmission) (Wilkinson, 1997). However, seed size
and dispersal mechanisms are poorly correlated with the mycorrhizal status of plants in other cases (Allsopp & Stock, 1995).
Most plants have mycorrhizas even though theoretical studies
suggest there will be major conflicts of interests and both
partners require means to prevent the other from cheating
(Schwartz & Hoeksema, 1998; Herre et al., 1999). It has been
suggested that symbiotic partners will avoid conflicts if one
utilises waste materials produced by the other (Genkai-Kato
& Yamamura, 1999). T he substances exchanged by mycorrhizal partners are not waste products, but may be present in
excess of immediate requirements (Section III). Consequently,
the costs of production /acquisition of these substances must
be balanced against the benefits provided by associations.
Models that use currency exchange ideas provide the most
realistic means of assessing relative costs and benefits of mycorrhizal associations (Gryndler, 1992; Schwartz & Hoeksema,
1998; Herre et al., 1999). T he benefits of exchanging photosynthates for mineral nutrients have outweighed the costs for
the majority of plants since they first colonised land.
T he host–fungus interface of mycorrhizal associations may
have evolved, in part, as a mechanism to limit cheating by
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tightly coupling the costs and benefits from exchange for
both partners. T his process seems to be primarily controlled
by plants, which can escape from their obligations by mycoheterotrophy, but cases where mycorrhizal fungi exploit plants
appear to be rare (when grown at natural nutrient levels).
Plant mechanisms for preventing unwanted colonisation may
not be specific enough to distinguish cheaters from beneficial
fungi. T he only effective mechanism for plants to stop fungi
from absorbing photosynthates without providing benefits
is to tightly couple gains and losses through simultaneous
exchange across a common interface. T his may explain why
both VAM and ECM evolved a complex interface with active
exchange of limited duration. T he loss of cost-benefit coupling occurs in exploitative mycorrhizas, but is rare otherwise
because the dominant plants in natural ecosystems cannot
afford to cheat as their success is interdependent with that of
their fungi.
Exploitative associations are the pinnacle of mycorrhizal
evolution, where the fungus replaces both the roots and leaves
of plants. T he roles of plants and fungi in exploitative associations do not correspond to normal definitions of mycorrhizas (MC Brundrett, unpublished). T hese plants, have no
commodities that can be used for exchange with fungi
(Section VII) and very complex host–fungus interfaces that
function by means we do not understand (MC Brundrett,
unpublished). Myco-heterotrophy often comes with a change
in fungal partners (e.g. orchids associating with wood rotting
or ECM fungi), and some fungi involved in these associations
have no specialisations for life within plants (Table 3). T he
fact that exploitative associations have arisen many times
suggests that both ECM and VAM fungi have a built in
capacity to support myco-heterotrophic plants. It seems that
mycorrhizal fungi have a very limited capacity to distinguish
roots of different plant species, suggesting that plants primarily
regulate specificity. We might expect ECM fungi to be better
at avoiding these traps, because they are often host specific,
but this is not the case.
A gradual transition from autotrophy to heterotrophy
occurs in some plant families, but there are other cases, such
as achlorophyllous orchid mutants that have jumped from a
high degree of autotrophy to full myco-heterotrophy in one
step (Rasmussen, 1995). Exploitative mycorrhizas seem to
be an evolutionary dead end due to highly specific habitat
requirements and the irreversible loss of photosynthesis. Most
have extremely high host-fungus specificity, so can only grow
in soil patches where a particular fungus thrives (Furman &
Trappe, 1971). T hese plants also tend to lose lignified tissues,
as in Ericales that became herbaceous plants (Kron et al.,
1999). Myco-heterotrophic plants tend to grow in deep shade
where there is insufficient light for photosynthetic plants
(Leake, 1994). Some adult green terrestrial orchids may be less
dependent on sunlight for energy than other plants, but this
requires further investigation (Rasmussen, 1995; McKendrick,
1996). One of the most important advantages provided by
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exploitative mycorrhizal associations may be the capacity to
grow in dark places. T he requirement for other plants to
support their fungal networks would also help explain why
myco-heterotrophic plants are never dominant in natural
ecosystems, and tend to be over-represented in threatened
species lists. It has been proposed that myco-heterotrophic
plants provide some symbiotic benefits to associated fungi
(Bidartondo et al., 2000), but this is unrealistic if the costs/
benefits of these associations are considered.
T he evolution of novel nutrient uptake mechanisms, such
as new types of mycorrhizas or NM cluster roots, coincided
with the origin of many plant families which apparently
became more competitive, or were able to occupy new habitats.
We would assume that these mechanisms provided a selective
advantage due to increased nutrient uptake efficiency relative
to association costs. In the Paleozoic, the evolution of novel
nutrient uptake mechanisms (ECM, NM, etc.) may have
played an important role in the eventual domination of angiosperms over more primitive VAM plants (gymnosperms, ferns,
etc.) in many habitats. Several theories attempt to explain why
angiosperms became dominant, but none are conclusively
supported by the available evidence (Barrett & Willis, 2001).
T he increasing importance of angiosperms was gradual
and probably involved climatic changes and disturbance (Hill
et al., 1999). T hese phytogeographic trends are complex,
because both angiosperm (e.g. Nothofagus) and gymnosperm
trees (Pinaceae) with ECM become dominant in some regions,
while plants with VAM remained dominant in many others.
It seems likely that, new root functional capabilities may be
partially responsible for the success of ECM angiosperms and
gymnosperms in cool forests and NM angiosperms such as
the Proteaceae and Cyperaceae in disturbed habitats. Climatic
and soil factors are also important, as in cooler climates ECM
trees tend to be dominant in soils with organic nutrients,
while VAM-trees are more important in soils with mineral
nutrients (Brundrett, 1991). T he situation in tropical regions
is more complex, as ECM and VAM dominated forests occur
in the same regions on similar soils (Högberg & Alexander,
1995; Newbery et al., 1997; Moyersoen et al., 1998). Additional
examples of plant-habitat /soil-mycorrhizal fungus coevolution
include the tendency for NM plants to occur in wet, saline,
dry, or cold habitats (Section IV).
Plants have had VAM associations (or something very similar)
since they first colonised land in the Early Paleozoic, and these
associations seem to have changed very little in the hundreds
of millions of years since roots evolved (Section IV). T he
slow rate of Glomalean fungus evolution may be matched
to the early plants they first associated with (Section II).
One possible explanation for their continuing success is that
fungi forming newer association types may be less tolerant
to changes in environmental conditions and would lose
any advantages they have gained from a higher degree of
coevolution with plants during periods of climate change.
Glomalean fungi may coevolve with their soils more than
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Tansley review no. 134
they do with their hosts, and may evolve so slowly that they
barely adjust to changes in climate as continents move, ice
ages come and go, and poles shift. Perhaps we should consider
VAM to be a long-term strategy that incorporates the flexibility to cope with both present and future environmental conditions. T he Glomales are arguably the most important group
of all living organisms, but are also one of the most enigmatic.
We lack fundamental knowledge of their genetics, lifecycles,
interactions with other organisms, capacities to adjust to
changing soils or climates, or how to define individuals and
species.
Acknowledgements
The author gratefully acknowledges supported by the Australian
Research Council and Botanic Gardens & Parks Authority.
T his review is dedicated to my wife Karen Clarke for her love
and companionship and for surviving months as a computer
widow. I am also very grateful to Chelsea Dog, my constant
companion throughout the process (asleep in the desk drawer).
I particularly thank the many people with whom I have had
fascinating discussions about mycorrhizas over the years.
Stephen Imhof, Patricia Gensel, Manuela Giovannetti, Carol
Peterson, Anne Pringle, Arthur Schüßler, T homas N. Taylor,
Katarzyna Turnau provided information. Valuable assistance
was provided by Bernadette Waugh and Linley T hornber of
the CSIRO library in Floreat. I am also very grateful to Jim
Trappe, Penny Hollick, Matt Barrett, Trevor Hein and the
anonymous reviewers who provided many comments on
earlier versions of this manuscript.
Note added in proof
Several important references concerning mycorrhizal evolution
which have recently come to my attention are listed below.
T he VAM fungi should now collectively be referred to as the
Glomeromycota not the Glomales (Schüßler et al., 2001).
Cairney JWG. 2000. Evolution of mycorrhiza systems. Naturwissenschaften
87 : 467– 475.
Halling RE. 2001. Ectomycorrhizae: co-evolution, significance, and
biogeography. Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden 88 : 5–13.
Heckman DS, Geiser DM, Eidell BR, Stauffer RL, Kardos NL, Hedges SB.
2001. Molecular evidence for the early colonisation of land by fungi and
plants. Science 293 : 1129–1133.
Schüßler A, Schwarzott D, Walker C. 2001. A new fungal phylum, the
Glomeromycota: phylogeny and evolution. Mycological Research 105 :
1413–1421.
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