Tagged: engineering

using fungi to build things

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2018 Fall and Winter Fungal News Update

Fungi appear in the news with surprising frequency. However, many of those stories do not provide any new information. Below is a summary of news stories that have taught me something about fungi from September through December 2018. Read each summary to learn about: zombie ants, mushroom poisonings, White Nose Syndrome, Bananas, and more.

Fungi in the News Image 0

Winter 2018 Fungal News Update

Fungi appear in the news with surprising frequency. However, many of those stories do not provide any new information. Below is a summary of what we’ve learned about fungi from November 2017 through Early February 2018. Read below to learn about: zombie ants, aflatoxin control, white nose syndrome solutions, using fungi in concrete, and more! Visit the associated links to get the full story.

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2017 Summer News Update

Fungi appear in the news with surprising frequency. However, many of those stories do not provide any new information. Below is a summary of what we’ve learned about fungi from May through early July 2017. Read below to learn about: early fungal fossils, fungal epigenetics, the best way to cook mushrooms, liver disease, malaria, and more! Visit the associated links to get the full story.

Fungi in the News Image 1

2017 Winter News Update

Fungi appear in the news with surprising frequency. However, many of those stories do not provide any new information. Below is a summary of what we’ve learned about fungi from November 2016 Through February 2017. Read below to learn about: bacteria-fungal interactions, snake fungal disease, psilocybin research, fungal furniture, white-nose syndrome, intelligent slime molds and more! Visit the associated links to get the full story.

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2016 Fall News Update

Fungi appear in the news with surprising frequency. However, many of those stories do not provide any new information. Below is a summary of what we’ve learned about fungi from November 2016 Through February 2017. Read below to learn about: two-fungi lichens, the fate of bananas, battery recycyling, Crohn’s disease, orcas, human pathogenic fungi, and more! Visit the associated links to get the full story.

#067: Holy Flying Fungus, Batman! 0

#067: Holy Flying Fungus, Batman!

Note: This is an archived post. What if you could grow biodegradable packing materials… or a surfboard… or maybe even a drone? It turns out you can, thanks to the unique properties of fungi.  One thing that fungi are especially good at doing is knitting things together.  This can be seen particularly well on the forest floor.  By the end of summer, most of the leaf litter has been stitched together by microscopic fungal cells.  If you reach down and pick up a leaf, you will likely find that a few others come up with it.  The same is true with garden mulch.  If you pulled up any dead annual plants recently, you probably noticed that your mulch was glued together in chunks by white stuff.  This white glue is actually a network of fungal cells (called a mycelium).  At this point, I should probably mention that you want the...