“…The use of metagenome‐assembled genomes (MAGs) is highly pertinent for studying Hg methylators, as they can reveal microbial diversity (Baker et al, 2021) and inferring the metabolic capacities of microorganisms (Vavourakis et al, 2018). Recent studies recovered hgcA ‐containing MAGs from diverse environments, including lakes (Jones et al, 2019; McDaniel et al, 2020; Peterson et al, 2020), ocean (Capo et al, 2022; Langwig et al, 2022; Lin et al, 2021), mangroves (Peterson, Krabbenhoft, et al, 2023; Zhang et al, 2023), a reservoir (Peterson, Poulin, et al, 2023), contaminated sites (Vigneron et al, 2021; Zheng et al, 2022) and composting sludge (Liu et al, 2022). Two of these studies also mined for hgcA in publicly available MAGs retrieved from diverse environments, encompassing the aforementioned list but also including permafrost (McDaniel et al, 2020; Zhang et al, 2023), wetlands, estuaries, subsurface, hydrothermal vents, endosymbionts, engineered ecosystems and hot springs (McDaniel et al, 2020).…”