WWB Trainer

1 WWB Story Tidbit

1 Full Tidbit.

A Fungi Story.

From History:
Subject: Fungi Evolution.
~950 Million Years Ago (+/- 50 million)
External digestion + chitin cell walls
About 950 million years ago, fungi ancestors evolve into multiple early-diverging lineages with flagellated spores: chytrid-like forms.

In simple terms.

By 950 million years ago, fungi ancestors used growth over motion to survive. They evolve into multiple early-diverging lineages with flagellated spores: chytrid-like forms and that chiton mushroom skin we all know. Fungi protection is different from the waxy, cuticle‑covered surfaces of plants and the collagen‑rich skins of animals.

Now, the details…

The earliest true fungal lineages likely resembled modern chytrids. Aquatic Produced flagellated (swimming) spores Fed by external digestion (already a defining fungal trait). This is before large animals dominate land.

 As the Holomycota fungal lineage began to diverge, they increasingly relied on growth rather than motion to survive. To better exploit solid substrates, they reinforced their cells with rigid chitin. From soil, decaying matter, and eventually land itself, they extracted a material that let them push into their environment instead of swimming through it. Early-diverging fungi such as chytrids kept their “rear‑engine” flagellum to navigate thin films of water, but most fungi gradually abandoned swimming altogether. They survived by using hydraulic pressure to drive their thread‑like hyphae forward, effectively growing their way into new territory rather than motoring there.


That Fungi Story, 

was first published on TST 1 week ago.

By the way, the flashcard inspired by it is this.

 

WWB Trainer
(c) 2025-2026 TouchstoneTruth.
Writing and coding by Michael Alan Prestwood.
Scroll to Top