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Fungi finding

PORT ANGELES (AFP) – You can’t walk very far through a forest in this part of the United States (US) without stumbling upon a mushroom, an eruption from a vast fungal kingdom that all life depends on, but about which we know very little.

Some are tall and thin with a helmet top, others are great flourishes of brain-like folds; some seem like they should be sheltering fairies in a storybook.

Many look like they could be delicious in the hands of a skilled chef; others… decidedly not.

But the dozens of species that enthusiasts and experts collected on a recent morning represent just a tiny fraction of life that is neither flora nor fauna.

“Mushrooms are not plants,” said Amy Honan, who teaches mycology and fungal ecology at Oregon University.

“Fungi are more closely related to animals than they are to plants.”

Plants make their own food through photosynthesis, but mushrooms have to eat something else.

“They spit out different enzymes, so they break down their food outside of their body, and they slurp it up like a smoothie,” Honan said.

Of the at least 2.5 million species of fungus thought to exist on Earth, scientists have described around 150,000 – six per cent – Honan told AFP during a field trip near Port Angeles in Washington state.

Compared with what we know about plants and animals, that’s practically nothing.

“We know about 98 per cent of the vertebrates that are on the planet,” she said. “We know about 85 per cent of plants that exist on the planet. We know about 20 per cent of invertebrates.”

This paucity of fungal knowledge is troubling because of the vital – and largely unseen – role that they play.

Fungi evolved before plants and created the conditions to allow vegetation to move from the sea to the land.

“Fungi are essential for all terrestrial ecosystems. They confer all kinds of benefits to plants, from salt tolerance, heavy metal tolerance, disease resistance,” Honan said.

“Basically, without fungi… plants would not exist. We need plants for oxygen, so the world would not exist in its current state.”

It would also be chock-full of dead things.

“Fungi break down all dead organic material, so they recycle all that carbon and other nutrients,” facilitating the life cycle of plants and animals.

There is a burgeoning awareness of the importance of fungi, whose role is set to come up for discussion at the UN Convention on Biological Diversity COP16 meeting in Colombia, which kicks off on Monday.

The Guardian newspaper reported last week that a joint proposal by Chile and the United Kingdom could see fungi recognised as “an independent kingdom of life in legislation, policies and agreements, in order to advance their conservation and to adopt concrete measures that allow for maintaining their benefits to ecosystems and people”.

ABOVE & BELOW: Mushroom enthusiast Jake Burt examines a mushroom growing in moss on a dead tree; and a selection of mushroom found during a fungi biodiversity survey near Port Angeles, Washington. PHOTO: AFP
PHOTO: AFP
A mushroom from the genus Crepidotus growing on dead tree branch. PHOTO: AFP
A Fir Cone Mushroom (Strobilurus trullisatus). PHOTO: AFP
A mushroom of the genus Gymnopilus. PHOTO: AFP

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