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Zombie Fungus Fossils Reveal 133-Million Evolutionary Secretes of Ophiocordyceps

Fossilized Fungi Provide Earliest Evidence of Insect-Fungal Interaction

Holotype of P. ironomyiae sp. nov. (NIGP203272), recovered from Kachin amber dating to the mid-Cretaceous (~99 Ma), shown alongside modern Ophiocordyceps fungi. Source: Proceedings of the Royal Society B (2025).

Scientists from the Chinese Academy of Sciences have uncovered fossilized parasitic fungi in mid-Cretaceous amber, providing some of the earliest known direct evidence of fungus-insect interactions and indicating that Ophiocordyceps may have emerged around 133 million years ago, adapting early to different hosts.

How Entomopathogenic Fungi Hijack Insect Behaviour

Zombie Ant Fungus: A Tale of Tropical Mind Control

Entomopathogenic fungi have developed remrkable strategies for manipulating insect hosts, effectively enlisting them in their own destruction. A notable example is Ophiocordyceps Unilateralis, known as the "Zombie Ant Fungus," which targets carpenter ants in tropical rain-forests. Upon infection, it take control of the ant's nervous system, forcing it to leave its colony's protection.

Under the fungus's control, the ant becomes a morbid marionette, compelled to scale vegetation and bite down on a leaf. It dies suspended in place as the fungus consumes it from within. Eventually, a fungal stalk, releasing spores onto the forest floor to continue the gruesome cycle.

Summit Disease: Grasshoppers and Crickets Under Fungal Influence

Ants are by no means the sole targets of fungal manipulation. In open meadows and grasslands, entomopathogenic fungi such as Entomophthora grylli infect grasshoppers and crickets, inducing a similarly eerie phenomenon known as "Summit Disease." As the infection advances, the insects forsake their normal behaviour, climbing to the tops of plants and adopting a characteristic splayed-legged pose.

When the fungus ruptures the host's exoskeleton, it emits a fine mist of spores that descent upon uninfected insects below. In certain instances, similar fungi have been seen to manipulate their hosts into wandering erratically before leading them into water, where they drownproviding the moist conditions the fungus requires to thrive.

Death in the Air: Houseflies and Entomophthora Muscae

Flies are not immune to fungal mind control. Entomophthora Muscae infects ordinary houseflies, compelling them to ascent to elevated spots—typically the upper corners of walls or windows—before death. The fly secures itself in place by extending its proboscis, offering and ideal launchpad for the fungus to burst from soft tissues. From the corpse, thread-like structures release spores into the air, ready to infect new hosts.

Spiders in the Web of Fungal Control

Even spiders are not exempt from fungal manipulation. Some Ophiocordyceps fungi drive their hosts to cling to vegetation—be it leaves or twigs—prior to death, allowing the parasite to safely sprout a fruiting structures and disperse spores across the surrounding area.

Evolutionary Engineering: Parasitic Adaptations for Survival

These extraordinary behaviours underscore the remarkable evolutionary adaptations of parasitic fungi. By hijacking their hosts instincts —such as climbing, grasping and movement—they engineer optimal conditions for reproduction. What seems like irrational self-destruction is, in truth, a calculated outcomes of fungal manipulation finely turned to its host.

Fossils in Amber: Unlocking the Fungal Past

Rare Glimpses of Parasitic Relationships in the Fossil Record

Direct fossil evidence of such parasitic relationships is rare, owing to the poor preservation of soft fungal tissues and the challenge of identifying pathogenic traits in ancient material. Earlier studies recorded only a few uncertain examples, with evolutionary timelines for Ophiocordyceps based largely on sparse calibration data and indirect inference.

New Species Identified in 99-Million-Year-Old Kachin Amber

In a study titled "Cretaceous entomopathogenic fungi illuminate the early evolution of insect-fungal associations," published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, researchers reported the discovery of two newly identified fungal species encased in 99-million-year-old Kachin amber.

Paleoophiocordyceps Gerontoformicae and Its Ant Host

Among the two fossil fungi detailed in the study, Paleoophiocordyceps Gerontoformicae was discovered in connection with an infected ant pupa preserved in mid-Cretaceous Kachin amber, approximately 99-million years old. The ant has been classified within the extinct genus Gerontoformica, part  of the subfamily Sphecomyrminae.

Nest Hygiene Behaviour Preserved in Fossil Evidence

It is probable that the infection began within the nest, as ant larvae typically remain inside. Worker ants may have introduced fungal spores into the nest, later removing the pupa to uphold colony hygiene, a behaviour observed in modern colonies. This fossilized pupa could represent an early example of such practices, with its removal and disposal outside the nest occurring before it was entombed in resin.

Holotype specimen of P. gerontoformicae sp. nov. (YKLP-AMB−010), encased in mid-Cretaceous Kachin amber (~99 Mya), shown alongside modern Ophiocordyceps fungi for comparison. Source: Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences (2025).

Fungal Form and Function: What Morphology Reveals

The morphology of P. gerontoformicae closely resembled traits found in modern ant-associated Ophiocordyceps species. The presence of laterally attached ascoma and asexual characteristics akin to the Hirsutella clade indicates its placements near the base of both the myrmecophilous hirsutelloid and O. sphecocephala line ages.

Ancestral Origins and Host Shifts Through Deep Time

Findings suggest that Ophiocordyceps likely originated in the Early Cretaceous, around 133.25 million years ago—significantly earlier than previous estimates of approximately 100 million years. Ancestral state reconstruction indicates the fungus initially parasitised beetles, later shifting to Lepidoptera and Hymenoptera as these insect groups diversified during the Cretaceous, providing fresh ecological niches for fungal adaptation.

Diversification in Tandem with Insect Hosts

The authors concluded that these fossils represent some of the earliest known evidence of insect pathogenic fungi and reinforce the notion that Ophiocordyceps diversified alongside its insect hosts.

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