Trebouxia is a unicellular green alga. It is a photosynthetic organism that can exist in almost all habitats found in polar, tropical, and temperate regions. It can either exist in a symbiotic relationship with fungi in the form of lichen or it can survive independently as a free-living organism alone or in colonies. Trebouxia is the most common photobiont in extant lichens. It is a primary producer of marine, freshwater and terrestrial ecosystems. It uses carotenoids and chlorophyll a and b to harvest energy from the sun and provide nutrients to various animals and insects. Trebouxia may have introduced photosynthesis into terrestrial habitats approximately 450 million years ago. It is also a bioindicator of habitat disturbances, freshwater quality, air pollution, carbon dioxide concentration, and climate change. Furthermore, its life cycle is complex and much research needs to be done to characterize it more completely. For decades, the presence of sexual reproduction was unknown. However, recent molecular evidence of recombination and the observation of sexual fusions of gametes to form zygotes suggest that sexual reproduction occurs. Trebouxia is a paraphyletic group. The horizontal gene transfer of protein encoding genes occurred between fungi and Trebouxia. There is also evidence of intron horizontal gene transfer among different strains of Trebouxia in lichen thalli. The presence of globose cells in fossil lichens from the Lower Devonian period (415 million years ago) that look similar to Trebouxia indicate the significance of Trebouxia fungal symbiosis throughout the history of Earth. The genus Trebouxia was initially described by Puymaly in 1924. The genus name of Trebouxia is in honour of Octave Treboux (1876–ca. 1940), who was an Estonian botanist (Mykology and Algology), plant physiologist, from the National University of Kharkiv and Riga. The genus was divided into two genera Trebouxia and Pseudotrebouxia.
Christof Holliger, Pierre Rossi, Jean-Paul Schwitzguebel, Eduardo Pereira Gomes, Stephen Mackay