Am J Bot. 1997 Mar;84(3):410.
Fossil ectomycorrhizae were found recently among permineralized plant remains in the middle Eocene Princeton chert of British Columbia. The ectomycorrhizae are associated with roots of Pinus and have a Hartig net that extends to the endodermis, a pseudoparenchymatous mantle, and contiguous extramatrical hyphae that are simple-septate. The mycorrhizal rootlets lack root hairs and dichotomize repeatedly to form large, coralloid clusters. Reproductive structures are absent. Based on the morphological characteristics, and the identity of the host, the closely related basidiomycete genera Rhizopogon and Suillus are suggested as comparable extant mycorrhizal fungi. These exquisitely preserved specimens represent the first unequivocal occurrence of fossil ectomycorrhizae and demonstrate that such associations were well-established at least 50 million years ago.
最近在不列颠哥伦比亚省中始新世的普林斯顿硅化木中发现了石化外生菌根。这些外生菌根与松树的根有关,具有延伸到内皮层的哈蒂格网,假薄壁状套层和连续的外生菌丝,这些菌丝是简单分隔的。菌根根毛缺失,并且反复二叉分枝形成大的珊瑚状簇。不存在生殖结构。根据形态特征和宿主的身份,建议将密切相关的担子菌属 Rhizopogon 和 Suillus 作为可比较的现存菌根真菌。这些保存精美的标本代表了化石外生菌根的首次明确出现,并证明这种共生关系至少在 5000 万年前就已经建立。