#010: Fungal Fossils
It may surprise you to learn that fungi are reasonably well represented in the fossil record. Most of these fossil fungi are microscopic and lack reproductive structures. Additionally, it is often difficult to infer their ecology, making positive identification difficult, if not impossible. Fossil fungi are often found inside fossilized plant tissue. This includes fossils of mycorrhizae, plant pathogens, and wood decomposers. Many of these finds come from Rhynie Chert in Scotland, which dates to the Devonian period (around 400 million years ago, characterized by small land plants and the first forests). This is around the same time of the first fossilized land plants. The fact that mycorrhizae were already well-established by this time suggests that fungi were instrumental in helping plants colonize the land. The best-preserved fossil fungi are found in amber, often growing on insects. A mosquito trapped in Baltic amber (from the Eocene period, around 47 million...