Article 6B3GJ How do fungi communicate?

How do fungi communicate?

by
Michael Hathaway, Willoughby Arévalo
from MIT Technology Review on (#6B3GJ)
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Although most of us think of fungi as mushrooms," these spore-producing bodies are just the reproductive organs of mycelium-decentralized, weblike bodies of branching tubes. Though usually microscopic, these structures can be enormous; the largest known example is a honey mushroom (Armillaria) that covers almost 10 square kilometers (3.7 square miles) and has lived for millennia.

As organisms living in complex relations to other life forms, fungi could not exist without communicating. And while they've traditionally been viewed as sessile, or permanently fixed in place, mycelia move by extending the tips of their tubes through a substrate, which could be a patch of soil or a fallen log.

As fungi grow, they are constantly sensing, learning, and making decisions. Fungi are like polyglots: they both speak" and understand a wide range of chemical signals. They release and respond to chemicals that float through the air and flow through water. Fascinatingly, fungi not only perceive but actively interpret a chemical's meaning depending on the context and in relation to other chemicals.

Studies of how fungi communicate lag way behind research on communication of plants and especially of animals. Most are based on several lab rat" species, so knowledge about other types is limited, but here we summarize what's known about three realms of communication: within a fungus, between fungi of the same species, and with other organisms.

Within a fungus

Each growing tip has both autonomy from and accountability to the whole organism, akin to the relationship of social insects to the hive. Between the cells within every mycelium flows a stream of chemicals, nutrients, and electrical impulses. Their movements act to keep the whole informed about happenings and coordinate actions across the network. Research by Andrew Adamatzky, a professor of unconventional computing at the University of the West of England in Bristol, suggests that they influence the mycelium's internal bioelectrical signals, which may form a sort of language." While a mycelium neither is nor contains a nervous system, mycelia share much in common with these systems. Both have branched structures, reinforce or prune pathways as needed, and use some of the same amino acids to transmit information.

Between fungi of the same species

Many fungi are sexual and must mate to reproduce. They send out pheromones and sniff" out those of others, and then they grow toward those that seem attractive (based on whatever it is fungi are attracted to). Whenever two mycelia meet, they communicate to negotiate their relationship, which can range from fusion (to form a reproductive or nonreproductive partnership) to indifference to physical exclusion and even chemical antagonism. Each mated mycelium negotiates the physical dynamics of fusion, and of life in partnership thereafter.

With other organisms

Fungi talk" and respond to many other beings. Through mycorrhizal mutualisms, they may share water and food with plant partners. Parasitic fungi produce a myriad of plant growth regulators, modifying plants to suit their needs. Some fungi, such as truffles, mimic animal sex pheromones to attract mammals and insects that act as sporinators," the fungal equivalent to pollinators. Other fungi are prey to roundworms (also known as nematodes). When they detect a nematode nearby, they can produce defensive compounds to ward it off. Other fungi hunt nematodes by detecting their chemical presence.

Mycorrhizal fungi are central in current debates about the wood-wide web," but many representations unfairly present fungi as living fiber-optic cables that allow trees to talk" to each other. Fungi are more than just passive wires; they are, in fact, actively perceiving, interpreting, and signaling themselves. They do this constantly, with a wide range of beings. How mushrooms create and interpret these signals in a cacophony of chemical and electrical noise remains a fascinating mystery.

Michael Hathaway is the author of What a Mushroom Lives For: Matsutake and the Worlds They Make. Willoughby Arevalo is the author of DIY Mushroom Cultivation: Growing Mushrooms at Home for Food, Medicine, and Soil.

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