Tag Archives: ecology

ENTANGLED LIFE

How Fungi Make Our Worlds, Change Our Minds, & Shape Our Futures

By Merlin Sheldrake

First off, did you know fungi is a kingdom of life— like a totally different category from animals and plants. Generally, fungi have been relegated to study under plants, and we know relatively little about this curious kingdom. One estimate is that only 6% of fungi species have even been described by science at this point. Yet without fungi, plants may not have developed root systems to evolve out of water. Additionally, fungi are the first organisms to break down bare rock to produce fertile soil. With diverse metabolisms, fungi can dissolve wood, rock, crude oil, plastic, and TNT. Some can clean up nuclear waste.

Most people don’t realize the extent to which we depend on fungi in our lives. Because fungi are more closely related to animals than plants, we use some fungal solutions to solve human health problems. Penicillin, cyclosporine, statins, many anti-cancer, and anti-viral drugs rely on fungi. Then there’s alcohol and magic mushrooms (psilocybin).

Humans depend on plant life and as it turns out, fungi supply plants with nutrients from the soil. In exchange, fungi get sugars and lipids generated from photosynthesis. This ancient relationship developed and continues to sustain life and us to this day. More than ninety percent of plant species rely on mycorrhizal fungi. This little understood ecosystem of fungal networks with plants became the life work of the author.

Sheldrake’s work (along with others) in this field have prompted new ways of thinking about the world. Fungi appear capable of very sophisticated behaviors pushing the need for new models to explain how these organisms communicate, solve problems, make decisions, learn, and remember.

Into the weird world of fungi:

Worm-hunting fungus: Generally, are happy eating decomposing plant material but when there is a shortage of food, they develop worm-hunting organs & produce chemical signals to lure nematodes.

Maze runners: Experiments with mycelium have shown they can work out the best routes between British cities creating a recognizable motorway (Lynne Boddy, PhD).

Burst asphalt: Some mushrooms take on water and are capable of pushing through asphalt.

Communication across the fungal network: The current theory suggests electrical signaling may convey information about food, injury, outsiders, or local conditions.

Fungal computers: Growing a mycelium ecosystem (in the future) may allow large-scale environmental monitoring.

What’s a lichen? A source of confusion. Where does one organism stop and another start? The more we know about lichens, the harder they are to define or classify. An open-ended question in science at this point.

Zombie fungus: One fungus which infects carpenter ants removes their fear of heights. The ant climbs a plant, clamps its jaw in a death grip, then mycelium grow from its feet binding it to the plant. After digesting the ant’s body, a stalk grows from the head dispersing spores. Called “zombie” because the fungus controls the brains of the ants in ways scientists can’t explain. The death grip is executed precisely in the right temperature and humidity zone to allow the fungus to fruit. Infected ants all bite together at noon, facing the sun and clamping a major plant vein.

Laughing mushrooms: In 1486, at the coronation of an Aztec emperor laughing broke out after consumption of the mushroom known as “flesh of the gods,” one kind of psilocybin mushroom.       

Fungus partners affect produce: Tests with strawberries grown with different fungal communities changed the flavor of the berries. What does this mean for gardeners/farmers going forward?

Wood Wide Web: The vast connection of plants and fungus to transport everything from nutrients to signaling compounds. Poisons and hormones can pass through shared networks. Genetic material (viruses, RNA) may also be passing through fungal channels.

Bee Colony Collapse: Promising research is under way to see if white rot fungi can be used to reduce bee mortality.

I hope this dive into the strange world of fungus has whetted your appetite for more. There is a lot in this book. The author outlines some of the groundbreaking areas of research and production that are ongoing. Some of it feels like science fiction. He acknowledges the contributions of citizen mycologists who have pushed the field (and continue to do so). The kingdom of fungi may well hold solutions for humanity as we discover more and open our awareness to these lifeforms.

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ELEPHANTS NEVER FORGOTTEN under contract

 640px-Elephant_near_ndutu

I’m happy to announce that my middle-grade novel, entitled Elephants Never Forgotten, is now under contract with MuseItUp Publishing. It’s a science fiction tale that could easily be pitched as Micro meets Jurassic Park. It was written at a time when I was finishing up my work in humane education and it honors the human/animal bond. The book is set for release in the Spring of 2015 as an e-book.

About the book:

A hundred years in the future, eleven-year-old Nigella receives a shipment from her deceased grandfather. Her inheritance is a herd of micro-elephants. While a lot of her friends have micro-pets, Nigella is at a loss on how to care for them. Why are her micro-elephants so different? What was her grandfather up to? In her quest to understand her pets, she learns that there might be a group of wild elephants left in a remote part of Africa. With the help of her best friend, Kepler, the girls set off on an adventure to discover the truth.

 

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ELEPHANTS NEVER FORGET

Lawrence Anthony
From Facebook Thula Thula Reserve

In no way am I a soft touch, but this one got me and got me good.

Not that I’m a stranger to animal stories. I’ve always had pets (mostly cats and dogs) and animals around me. Surrounded by the daily activity of birds, squirrels, and bunnies, nature and nature watching are part of my day. I even spent a couple of years teaching humane education classes to children in schools. And there’s my first full length book on animal intelligence that never saw the light of day. But another of my books is closer to the heart of the story I’m going to tell. That book was about elephants.

Noted conservationist Lawrence Anthony died in March this year and, shortly after his death, two herds of elephants arrived at the family compound in South Africa. No one knows how the elephants could have known about Anthony’s death, but it seemed evident to the family that they had come to pay their respects to a friend who had saved their lives. The elephants lingered for two days before returning to the bush. This incident reminds us of the interconnectedness of all things and the many mysteries that tie our lives together in unimaginable ways. Simple, dignified, powerful, and heart-centered.

Lawrence Anthony was an insurance man and real estate developer before he undertook the running of one of South Africa’s largest game sanctuaries. In the mid-1990s, he purchased the 5000 acre reserve known as Thula Thula. Adding luxury accommodations and fine dining, he promoted eco-tourism.

An out of the blue phone call in 1999 came and changed his life. He was offered a herd of nine problematic elephants who were going to be shot if he refused them. He was also told the herd was violent and the matriarch was a talented escape artist. Knowing the job would be difficult, Anthony took it anyway. There was a chance to save the elephants and reintroduce them onto Zulu lands. Only seven of the elephants were delivered to Thula Thula. Two had been killed in the transfer and in the presence of the surviving seven. The herd arrived traumatized and angry.

That first night the elephants broke out of their containment area. They first smashed an electric generator and then, acting as a team, two adults used a tree to take down the electric fence. Racing against time and locals armed to shoot to kill, Anthony and his reserve rangers managed to get the elephants back onto safe ground. Later, as Anthony looked at the matriarch, he realized that it was just a matter of time before they’d break out again. And that’s when inspiration struck. In order to foster trust and understanding, Anthony decided he’d live with them. His experience with the herd is the subject of his book The Elephant Whisperer.

From Facebook Thula Thula Reserve

Many may also remember it was Lawrence Anthony who raced to Baghdad in 2003 after the American invasion to rescue the zoo animals left abandoned in the city. More about his life can be found in his three published books and on the Thula Thula FACEBOOK page.

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