WA Organic and Isotope Geochemistry Centre, The Institute for Geoscience Research, School of Earth & Planetary Sciences, Curtin University, Perth, Western Australia, Australia.
Swedish Museum of Natural History, Stockholm, Sweden.
Geobiology. 2024 Jul-Aug;22(4):e12616. doi: 10.1111/gbi.12616.
The Rhynie Chert (Lower Devonian, Scotland) hosts a remarkably well-preserved early terrestrial ecosystem. Organisms including plants, fungi, arthropods, and bacteria were rapidly silicified due to inundation by silica-rich hot spring fluids. Exceptional molecular preservation has been noted by many authors, including some of the oldest evidence of lignin in the fossil record. The evolution of lignin was a critical factor in the diversification of land plants, providing structural support and defense against herbivores and microbes. However, the timing of the evolution of lignin decay processes remains unclear. Studies placing this event near the end of the Carboniferous are contradicted by evidence for fungal pathogenesis in Devonian plant fossils, including from the Rhynie Chert. We conducted organic geochemical analyses on a Rhynie Chert sample, including hydropyrolysis (HyPy) of kerogen and high-resolution mass spectrometric mapping of a thin section, to elucidate the relationship between lignin and the potential fungal marker perylene. HyPy of kerogen showed an increase in relative abundance of perylene supporting its entrapment within the silicate matrix of the chert. Lignin monomers were isolated through an alkaline oxidation process, showing a distribution dominated by H-type monomers. G- and S-type monomers were also detected, preserved by rapid silicification. Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons including perylene, a known marker for lignin-degrading fungi, were also concentrated in the kerogen and found to be localized within silicified plant fragments. Our results strongly link perylene in the Rhynie Chert to the activity of phytopathogenic fungi, demonstrating the importance of fungal degradation processes as far back as the Early Devonian.
莱尼燧石(下泥盆统,苏格兰)拥有一个保存非常完好的早期陆地生态系统。由于富含硅的温泉流体的淹没,包括植物、真菌、节肢动物和细菌在内的生物体迅速被硅化。许多作者都注意到了非凡的分子保存,包括化石记录中最早的木质素证据。木质素的进化是陆地植物多样化的关键因素,为植物提供了结构支撑和抵御食草动物和微生物的防御。然而,木质素降解过程的进化时间仍不清楚。将这一事件定在石炭纪末期的研究与泥盆纪植物化石中真菌病原体的证据相矛盾,包括来自莱尼燧石的证据。我们对莱尼燧石样本进行了有机地球化学分析,包括干酪根的加氢热解(HyPy)和薄片的高分辨率质谱映射,以阐明木质素与潜在真菌标志物苝之间的关系。干酪根的 HyPy 显示出苝的相对丰度增加,支持其被困在燧石的硅酸盐基质中。通过碱性氧化过程分离出木质素单体,显示出以 H 型单体为主的分布。还检测到 G 型和 S 型单体,它们通过快速硅化得到保存。多环芳烃,包括已知的木质素降解真菌标志物苝,也在干酪根中浓缩,并发现存在于硅化的植物碎片内。我们的结果将莱尼燧石中的苝强烈地与植物病原菌真菌的活动联系起来,证明了真菌降解过程早在早泥盆世就很重要。