“…Culture-based studies have found fungi associated with leaves, roots and rhizomes of seagrasses, but there is little agreement between studies about the taxonomic composition of these communities within and between seagrass species (Newell, 1981;Kuo, 1984;Cuomo et al, 1985;Devarajan & Suryanarayanan, 2002;Sakayaroj et al, 2010;Mata & Cebrián, 2013;Shoemaker & Wyllie-Echeverria, 2013;Supaphon et al, 2013Supaphon et al, , 2014Supaphon et al, , 2017Panno et al, 2013;Kirichuk & Pivkin, 2015;Venkatachalam, 2015;Venkatachalam et al, 2015;Torta et al, 2015;Ling et al, 2015;Vohník et al, 2016). Recently culture-independent studies of seagrassassociated fungi have more thoroughly investigated the diversity of these microorganisms and highlighted a need to further understand factors affecting their biogeography and community dynamics (Wainwright et al, 2018(Wainwright et al, , 2019Hurtado-McCormick et al, 2019;Ettinger & Eisen, 2019). However, these studies were severely hampered by a lack of representation of fungal sequences from the marine environment in public databases and found that taxonomic assignments could not be made for many fungal sequences associated with seagrasses.…”