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"It's beautiful, isn't it?"
The man asking this question is Lance Biechele, a man who's
been studying mushrooms for 35 years. He's looking at a dead
maple tree, and to the untrained eye, this skeletal tree is
one of the last things a person would even be tempted to call
beautiful. The tree is rotting, it's almost falling apart
with decay. It makes you thinkof Halloween, not Renoir.
To Biechele, the tree is nevertheless beautiful. To him,
it's an example of how nature's best recyclers work. "There
may be as many as 1000 different species of fungi at work
in this tree," he states. "Without them helping to decompose
trees and other vegetation, we would have no forests."
The forest needs fungi, he goes on to explain, because fungi
are "the forest's digestive system." Fungi break down the
old vegetation so that new trees have the room and nutrients
to grow.
Part of the dead tree's beauty, in Biechele's eyes, is that
it supports an entire ecosystem. Pointing to several large
holes in the tree, he says that that these make wonderful
homes for raccoons, possums, and woodpeckers. But what really
inspires his sense of wonder is the trillions of fungi, almost
all of which are too small to see.
On the tree's surface, you can see a few of the large, visible
kinds of fungi. The most obvious are the 50 or so gray-green,
turkey tail mushrooms growing at the base of the tree. They
look like a series of half circles layered on the tree like
shingles. They really do remind you of turkey tails.
Biechele can easily point out a dozen other kinds of mushrooms
on this tree. These include the brownish deer mushrooms, the
cream-colored oyster
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mushrooms and the tan-colored puff balls.
The visible part of each mushroom on the rotting tree is
sustained by miles of microscopic "roots" or filaments called
hyphae. You can't see the hyphae, partly because they're generally
inside the tree's trunk, but mostly because they're far too
small. A thousand of these hyphae bundled together would be
no thicker than a human hair.
The hyphae provide the mushrooms with the nutrients and
the energy to give off astonishing numbers of reproductive
cells . A typical mushroom can release millions of spores
an hour for several days. The giant puffball mushroom may
contain as many as a trillion spores.
One of the most surprising facts about fungi is that some
of them can act like living spider webs. Their hyphae regularly
trap microscopic worm-like creatures called nematodes. They
do it by using the biological equivalent of Krazy Glue. The
carnivorous fungi attract their prey by giving off a chemical
that the nematodes seem to find alluring. Apparently, it's
the Channel Number 5 of the nematode world. When a misguided
and bamboozled nematode touches a strand of hyphae, the nematode
will become hopelessly stuck to it. The fungus gradually ingests
its immobilized prey.
Once you know some of the complexity and importance of what's
going on inside dead trees, Biechele hopes you'll look at
them in a new way. They aren't ugly, they're part of an intricate
and astonishing environment that becomes beautiful as you
get to know it.
For a good book on the fungi that perform these wonders,
Biechele recommends MUSHROOMS DEMYSTIFIED, by David Arora.
It's available through Ten Speed Press in Berkeley, California
for $35 plus $3.50 postage and handling. You can call Ten
Speed Press at 1 800 841 2665. They accept credit cards.
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