Researchers from the University of Cambridge and the Natural History Museum, London have identified a new species of ancient symbiotic fungus preserved within a 407-million-year-old plant fossil from Scotland. The discovery provides unprecedented three-dimensional insight into one of the earliest known plant–fungus partnerships, known as mycorrhiza.
Gardeners and farmers know mycorrhizae are vital for plant health - with these fungi living symbiotically inside plant roots, extending their reach to absorb water and nutrients like phosphorus. This mutually beneficial partnership underpins the majority of plant life today and is one of nature’s most successful relationships.
Studying this partnership, which dates back to when plants first colonised land, is allowing scientists to discover new information about how plant-fungi partnerships shaped ecosystems for hundreds of millions of years.
The advanced microscopy techniques used to distinguish the fungus from the surrounding plant cells open a powerful new way to identify fossilised life forms. By analysing the fossils unique light signatures - a kind of natural fingerprint preserved through time - scientists can detect traces of organisms long after their DNA has vanished.
Published today in the journal New Phytologist, the paper describes a new species of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus, Rugososporomyces lavoisierae, forming a symbiotic relationship with the early land plant, Aglaophyton majus - the second fungal species known to have been hosted by this plant.
The fossil from the Windyfield Chert, Scotland provides the most detailed evidence to date that early land plants engaged in complex symbiotic relationships with multiple fungal species over 400 million years ago.
The implications of this discovery extend far beyond the immediate findings.
“This is just the start. By applying these methods to the fossilised remains of different organisms, we now have a powerful new tool to tell apart structures that may look similar but differ in their fine ultrastructure, for example ancient arthropods, plants and fungi,” said Professor Sebastian Schornack, Group Leader at the Sainsbury Laboratory Cambridge University, who co-led the study.
He added: “This technique adds a new dimension to how we identify, describe and discriminate fossilised ancient life, using the unique light signals these materials emit as a kind of fingerprint. Although the original biological material is fossilised and no DNA remains, these optical signatures preserve vital clues to their identity.”
Using these techniques with other fossils from the Windfield and nearby Rhynie cherts, researchers aim to understand how early symbioses evolved and how plants and fungi first learned to coexist.
The fossil analysis brought together specialists from the Natural History Museum - who found the new fungus and conducted brightfield microscopy and confocal microscopy with the Muséum d’Histoire Naturelle in P the Sainsbury Laboratory Microscopy Core Facility - who conducted confocal, fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM) and Raman i and the Cambridge Graphene Centre, responsible for Raman spectroscopy.
The combined use of advanced imaging and spectroscopy applied for the first time to a fossil plant enabled the team to distinguish fossilised fungal and plant tissues based on their unique light signatures, marking a breakthrough that could transform how scientists’ study ancient life in the future.
“By combining confocal fluorescence lifetime imaging with Raman spectroscopy, we can chemically identify ancient microscopic life forms with remarkable precision. Our new technique is opening an exciting new window on life’s earliest chapters,” said Dr Raymond Wightman, Manager of the Sainsbury Laboratory Microscopy Core Facility who led the FLIM imaging work.
The fossil, held at the National Museum of Scotland, Edinburgh, was prepared and studied by the Natural History Museum’s scientific associate Dr Christine Strullu-Derrien, who co-led the study.
“Mycorrhizas are very rare in the fossil record and have never been found in the Windyfield Chert before. The presence of the arbuscule shows that the fungus wasn’t parasitising on the plant or feeding on it after death – instead, there was a symbiotic association. The fungus would have provided minerals like phosphorus in return for sugars from the plant in a way that benefits them both,” said Dr Christine Strullu-Derrien.
This fossilised relationship was found to closely resemble modern arbuscular mycorrhizal associations that continue to play a vital role in plant nutrition and soil health today.
Reference: Christine Strullu-Derrien, Raymond Wightman, Liam McDonnell, Gareth Evans, Frédéric Fercoq, Paul Kenrick, Andrea Ferrari and Sebastian Schornack: ‘An arbuscular mycorrhiza from the 407-million-year-old Windyfield chert identified through advanced fluorescence and Raman imaging.’ New Phytologist, Nov 2025. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/nph.70655.
An ancient plant-fungus partnership has been revealed using advanced microscopy imaging, providing evidence of the mutually beneficial relationship that enabled plants to adapt to life on land.
Our new technique is opening an exciting new window on life’s earliest chapters.Raymond WightmanHighly magnified image of the fossil
The text in this work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. Images, including our videos, are Copyright ©University of Cambridge and licensors/contributors as identified. All rights reserved. We make our image and video content available in a number of ways – on our main website under its Terms and conditions, and on a range of channels including social media that permit your use and sharing of our content under their respective Terms.
YesLicence type: Attribution-Noncommerical
Wednesday 10 December 2025
Cambridge - 28 days ago
Scientists discover new species of fungus in 407-million-year-old plant fossil from Scotland
UConn Hartford, Other Institutions Relaunch Greater Hartford Consortium for Higher Education
- ConnecticutTwo Business Students Visit the Amazon, Network with Sustainability Experts, Gain New Perspectives at COP30 Summit
- ConnecticutCambridge spinout Nu Quantum attracts $60 million investment for quantum computer networking
- CambridgeGroundbreaking discovery shows humans were making fire 350,000 years earlier than previously thought
- LiverpoolRiconoscimento internazionale dell’IEEE Communications Society al Prof. Piero Castoldi per l’eccellenza nella ricerca e nell’innovazione nel campo delle reti ottiche
- Sant’AnnaLa Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna avvia la raccolta dati europea sulle pratiche ESG delle PMI: parte la survey del Progetto RESPONSE
- Sant’Anna
‘Terms of Respect’: Eisgruber’s book is opening new avenues to share what colleges get right on free speech and academic inquiry
- Princeton
Seoul National University of Science and Technology - QS Sustainability Ranking 2026
- topuniversities
Tashkent University of Information Technologies named after Muhammad Al-Khwarizmi - Asian University Rankings 2026
- topuniversities
Widyagama University of Malang - Asian University Rankings - South Eastern Asia 2026
- topuniversities
SVKM s Narsee Monjee Institute of Management Studies(Deemed to be University) - Asian University Rankings 2026
- topuniversitiesLZ sets a world’s best in hunt for dark matter and gets new look at neutrinos from sun’s core
- LiverpoolChris Handy excels in hacking competition: ‘Everything we find helps us to secure research data better’
- LeidenMethods Mondays: Designing and Integrating a Sequential Mixed Methods Study: A Practical Overview
- Queen’s Barcelona
Copenhagen
Gordon
Aberdeen
acenet
Agricultural Sciences
Alabama
Arizona
Autonomous
Bath
Bergen
Bern
Bloomington
Boston
Bozen-Bolzano
Brandeis
Buffalo
Calgary
Cambridge
Central European
Charité
Chester
Colorado Boulder
Connecticut
Copenhagen
Duisburg-Essen
Duke
Dundee
École
Eindhoven
Emory
Estadual de Campinas
Federal do Rio de Janeiro
Florida
Frankfurt am Main
Galway
Geneva
Goethe
Groningen
Harvard
Hawai’i at Mānoa
Hong Kong
Hongkong
Imperial
James Cook
Keele
Kingston
KTH
Laval
Leiden
Liège
Liverpool
Lomonosov Moscow
Luxembourg
Macquarie
Mancunion
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
MMU
Montreal
Nacional de Colombia
Newcastle
Northampton
Nuremberg
Ohio
Ottawa
Oxford
Paris-Sud
Princeton
Purdue
qswownews
Quaid-i-Azam
Queensland
Queen’s
Radboud
Riverside
Ruhr
Rush
Rutgers
RWTH Aachen
Santa Barbara
Santa Cruz
Sant’Anna
São Paulo
Sciences Po
Scuola
SOAS
South Australia
South Florida
Southampton
St-andrews
St. Louis
Stanford
Stirling
Stockholm
Stony Brook
Stuttgart
Surrey
Sussex
SUU
Swansea
Sydney
Syracuse
Texas
Texas A&M
Texas at Dallas
Tokyo
topuniversities
Trento
Tufts
Ulm
USnews/Education
Utah
Utrecht
Wageningen
Waikato
Warwick
Waseda
Washington
Western Australia
Western Ontario
Wilhelms-University Munster
William & Mary
Wollongong
Würzburg
Yale
Yeshiva
⁞
Copenhagen
Gordon
Aberdeen
acenet
Agricultural Sciences
Alabama
Arizona
Autonomous
Bath
Bergen
Bern
Bloomington
Boston
Bozen-Bolzano
Brandeis
Buffalo
Calgary
Cambridge
Central European
Charité
Chester
Colorado Boulder
Connecticut
Copenhagen
Duisburg-Essen
Duke
Dundee
École
Eindhoven
Emory
Estadual de Campinas
Federal do Rio de Janeiro
Florida
Frankfurt am Main
Galway
Geneva
Goethe
Groningen
Harvard
Hawai’i at Mānoa
Hong Kong
Hongkong
Imperial
James Cook
Keele
Kingston
KTH
Laval
Leiden
Liège
Liverpool
Lomonosov Moscow
Luxembourg
Macquarie
Mancunion
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
MMU
Montreal
Nacional de Colombia
Newcastle
Northampton
Nuremberg
Ohio
Ottawa
Oxford
Paris-Sud
Princeton
Purdue
qswownews
Quaid-i-Azam
Queensland
Queen’s
Radboud
Riverside
Ruhr
Rush
Rutgers
RWTH Aachen
Santa Barbara
Santa Cruz
Sant’Anna
São Paulo
Sciences Po
Scuola
SOAS
South Australia
South Florida
Southampton
St-andrews
St. Louis
Stanford
Stirling
Stockholm
Stony Brook
Stuttgart
Surrey
Sussex
SUU
Swansea
Sydney
Syracuse
Texas
Texas A&M
Texas at Dallas
Tokyo
topuniversities
Trento
Tufts
Ulm
USnews/Education
Utah
Utrecht
Wageningen
Waikato
Warwick
Waseda
Washington
Western Australia
Western Ontario
Wilhelms-University Munster
William & Mary
Wollongong
Würzburg
Yale
Yeshiva