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The coevolution of fungus-ant agriculture
Journal article

The coevolution of fungus-ant agriculture

Abstract

Fungus-farming ants cultivate multiple lineages of fungi for food, but, because fungal cultivar relationships are largely unresolved, the history of fungus-ant coevolution remains poorly known. We designed probes targeting >2000 gene regions to generate a dated evolutionary tree for 475 fungi and combined it with a similarly generated tree for 276 ants. We found that fungus-ant agriculture originated ~66 million years ago when the end-of-Cretaceous asteroid impact temporarily interrupted photosynthesis, causing global mass extinctions but favoring the proliferation of fungi. Subsequently, ~27 million years ago, one ancestral fungal cultivar population became domesticated, i.e., obligately mutualistic, when seasonally dry habitats expanded in South America, likely isolating the cultivar population from its free-living, wet forest-dwelling conspecifics. By revealing these and other major transitions in fungus-ant coevolution, our results clarify the historical processes that shaped a model system for nonhuman agriculture.

Authors

Schultz TR; Sosa-Calvo J; Kweskin MP; Lloyd MW; Dentinger B; Kooij PW; Vellinga EC; Rehner SA; Rodrigues A; Montoya QV

Journal

Science, Vol. 386, No. 6717, pp. 105–110

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Publication Date

October 4, 2024

DOI

10.1126/science.adn7179

ISSN

0036-8075

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