An unexpected partnership

<p>Yeast, molds and other fungi are found in most environments across the world. Many of the fungi that live on land today form relationships called symbioses with other microbes. Some of these relationships, like those formed with green algae, are beneficial and involve the exchange carbon, nitrogen and other important nutrients. Algae first evolved in the sea and it has been suggested that symbioses with fungi may have helped some algae to leave the water and to colonize the land more than 500 million years ago.</p> <p>A fungus called&nbsp;<em>Mortierella elongata</em>&nbsp;grows as a network of filaments in soils and produces large quantities of oils that have various industrial uses. While the details of&nbsp;<em>Mortierella</em>&rsquo;s life in the wild are still not certain, the fungus is thought to survive by gaining nutrients from decaying matter and it is not known to form any symbioses with algae.</p> <p><a href="https://medium.com/life-on-earth/an-unexpected-partnership-1f437cee0492"><strong>Click Here</strong></a></p>
Tags: Environments