Friday, June 21, 2019

Natures Internet......The Mycelium Network




One thing binds gardens together more than anything else. Fungi.

You find fungi in Antarctica and in nuclear reactors, they were here before us and will be here long after we’re gone. They live inside your lungs, your skin is covered with them and can be found in hair as they are the primary cause of dandruff. Fungi are the most under appreciated organisms, yet they could cure you from smallpox and turn cardboard boxes into forests. There are vastly more fungi species than plants and each and every one of them plays a crucial role in life’s support systems.
It’s no wonder “No dig gardening” is beneficial to the soil when you see how the soil web holds together.  

Mycology is the study of fungi and it’s found that this important organism on the planet is around 1 billion years old.  They are one of the oldest things on earth.
 
They have their own category as they are neither animal nor plant in biology terms and there are millions of species.

Mushrooms are the fruiting bodies of the fungi, far more goes on underground. They are microscopic themselves but can cover massive areas covering hundreds of acres.

The term fungus can evoke negative connotations as we associate the word with itchy toes and other skin or body irritations and diseases. However they are very much a force for good, we just don’t notice it. Life as we know it wouldn’t be possible if it wasn’t for fungi.

Let’s go back a few billion years. 

Single celled organisms had been in the oceans for a long time. The land was just a rocky mass with no life. Early bacteria developed the ability to use the sun for photosynthesis, a process of converting the light into nutrients. 

The by-product of this is oxygen, which was released into the atmosphere allowing for more complex life forms to form which we call the “Cambrian Explosion”. 

Sixty million years after that, more complex life forms came onto land in the shape of fungi with their unique ability to break down and digest rocks, turning it into soil.  The fungi secreted a digestive enzyme and along with mechanical pressure they were able to access nutrients from the rock that were unavailable to any organism at the time. Fungi also fed on the build-up of bacteria on the shore over the millions of years when nothing else was on land. 

What followed were small protoplants such as liverwort. Fungi had minerals and the plants had photosynthesis and they both needed what the other had to survive. Fungi and plants started to cooperate in a process called symbiosis, which is a mutually beneficial relationship. 

Plants spread and the world started to turn green. Some plants became independent of the fungi and a new balance was created. More oxygen was produced and as things died they needed to be recycled so they could continue to be used. This is where fungi come in. They eat death. By breaking down dead things they allow nutrients to be reused which is fundamental for life on earth.

This symbiosis is alive and well in the form of Mycorrhiza which continues to change and evolve and benefits up to 90% of plant growth in the world. 

Some plants such as the orchid still rely on fungi for its survival. The plant has virtually no independent energy reserve in its germination stage. Orchids can be parasitic though and instead of cohabiting with the fungi, the plant sucks the energy from it. The fungus itself will be in a symbiotic relationship with another plant and will use that energy to feed the orchid, an indirect photosynthesis source. A fungus can also be a parasite too as we are aware in the garden and it’s not very palatable when you realise you have just put a mouldy strawberry in your mouth

Fungi can help exchange nutrients amongst trees, if a tree is being shaded by other larger trees it can be fed more nutrients via the fungi so it grows tall enough to survive. These common mycorrrhizal networks are everywhere in our gardens and even connecting huge forests. It could be known as “Natures Internet” or even the “Wood Wide Web”

Signals in plants connecting in this way can warn of oncoming danger in the form of pests and disease. They can help to pass on chemicals to deter or hinder the growth of competing plants by depriving them of nutrients. The fungi can also pass on chemicals to stop pests eating leaves.
It’s in the best interest of the fungi that the plant survives which allows for the continuation of their symbiotic relationship.

Fungi isn’t always visible but it a cornerstone of our ecosystem, forging relationships with other organisms – both alive and dead.

It’s not just plants that interact with fungi either. It’s a food source for us, the yeast we need for our bread, medicines, pest control, leather substitute and packaging.

Fungi are cool, I’ve only skimmed the surface of this complex world but it’s all around you in the garden.

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