Share The Seeds
Gardening Area => Edible and Medicinal Mushrooms => Topic started by: Mr. seeds on June 23, 2015, 02:35:04 AM
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hi guys, if you're like me you love funfacts! From what i know Fungus can have alot of funfacts because there's so many types and generally the mycological world is incredibly diverse.
So, i would like help in compliling a Fun FaQ; a body of threads designed to give interesting funfacts about mycology, mushrooms, fungus, and anything related. the readers would benefit from this thread. they would look at it and learn about the medicinal properties, the ecological impact, their directive (often animals and plants have directives. many spiders spin webs and use it for catching prey. bee's polinate the flowers. Some parasitic mushrooms feed off of tee's. tree's produce air. humans think, grow, and leave behind a genetic "seed" that breeds off into another being subject to change overtime.).
I was also thinking we could use it for interesting funfacts as well as interesting facts on mycology and such. Do you guys think that this is a decent idea? is there any room for improvement or feedback? How could this thread be better communicated or were there areas where i didn't touch up on something you believe could have been asked or communicated differently?
i ask this because i just want to improve the thread immediately if it has some areas that i missed, etc.
thanks! :D
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sounds like a great idea to me and Id love to contribute as much as possible you sound like such a fun guy
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Awesome idea Mr.seeds. Digital high five. +1
"Recent evidence suggests that spores released into the air from mushrooms act as nuclei for the formation of raindrops in clouds. This may promote rainfall in ecosystems—like those in the tropics—heavily populated by mushrooms and other fungi."
http://www.popsci.com/mushrooms-may-help-bring-rain-to-forest-ecosystems
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DUDE! i remember reading that! i wonder if we could do this in desserts? (returns your digital high five and sends you a telepathic fist bump)
Lets get this thread rolling and growing! i'm gonna try to find more info, don't have anything to share right now.
- peace and love
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Maybe this one?
http://www.fungi.com/blog/items/the-petroleum-problem.html
nobody
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Pesteliopsis microspora consumes plastic as a primary substrate as well. Will have a culture soon :)
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Fungi before plants ! Wow you never stop learning.
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although off topic from fungi, apparently mealworms can digest plastic and styrofoam. i'll make a post about it later.
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^ i read that too. I'd feed it to my bugs but i eat them too.
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Here's a little fun fact (not FAQ):
https://blog.mycology.cornell.edu/2013/01/20/zap-lightning-gods-and-mushrooms/ (https://blog.mycology.cornell.edu/2013/01/20/zap-lightning-gods-and-mushrooms/)
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mycelium in space, that's just awesome
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A brain-washing, body-snatching fungus: Fungi in the Ophiocordyceps genus infects ants and other insects and actually modify their behavior in order to complete their own life-cycle (spreading spores), and then kill the insect.
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/fungus-makes-zombie-ants/
http://news.psu.edu/story/277383/2013/05/21/research/getting-bottom-zombie-ant-phenomenon
And it does not end there, either: "The microorganism is somehow able to recognize the brains of different ant species, and releases its mind-controlling chemical cocktail only when in its preferred host"
http://www.livescience.com/47751-zombie-fungus-picky-about-ant-brains.html
"The fungus leads ants to their deaths along the outskirts of the colony, creating a "sniper's alley" where the corpses can discreetly spread deadly fungal spores"
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/zombie-fungus-makes-snipers-alley-around-ant-colonies/
What's also interesting though, is that other species of the same genus are actually used medicinally in traditional Chinese and Tibetan medicines. An immunosuppressive drug, Ciclosporin, is sourced from Tolypocladium inflatum, which is used to prevent rejection during organ transplantation by inhibiting T-cells.
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Don't know how I didn't post this first! Guess I thought it was common knowledge by now. I have a culture :)
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north American ganoderma species (http://www.shroomery.org/forums/showflat.php/Number/20636985)
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Don't have a shroomery account. :(
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several good articles in one:
http://media.bostonmycologicalclub.org/pdf/Bulletin/Final612Bulletinsequence.pdf
candy caps & quararibea, ergot, mushroom-farming-ants, and more!
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Don't have a shroomery account. :(
The full text is rather long and has many images. I'll get it transferred over to this page this week. You really should get a shroomery account!
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Don't have a shroomery account. :(
The full text is rather long and has many images. I'll get it transferred over to this page this week. You really should get a shroomery account!
I'm a mycotek.org kinda guy.