Mycelium is everywhere – in leaf litter, compost piles, mulch, crops after harvest, and even in the dead wood under our feet.
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Why mushrooms are starting to replace everything
Imagine a world where homes, clothing, and electronics are grown rather than manufactured. Mycelium, the root structure of ...
Irish businesses are turning mycelium – fungus – into materials with the potential to rid us of plastics, and using it to ...
‘Without them there is no life’: the race to understand the mysterious world of Africa’s fungi
Amid growing evidence of fungi’s key role in ecosystems and storing carbon, African scientists are championing the need to preserve ‘funga’ as much as flora and fauna ...
Weird things can happen to even the most manicured lawns, including strange slimy spots and bizarre discolorations. Find out ...
The artist Klara Hodsnedlova inaugurates OMA’s soaring new atrium stairway at the New Museum. Credit...Sabrina Santiago for The New York Times Supported by By Patricia Leigh Brown If a prehistoric ...
Scientists discover that forest mushrooms communicate through underground electrical signals—and even urine can change the ...
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Fungi May Have Their Own ‘Language'-and Scientists Think It's Happening Right Beneath Our Feet
You've probably noticed mushrooms popping up everywhere lately, from lion's mane lattes to reishi tinctures. But here's ...
This month, trade show Fashion InStyle will gather the entire apparel supply chain, creating a single sourcing platform for ...
A vast meshwork of soil-bound fungi governs life aboveground. In Alaska, and at field sites around the world, researchers are ...
Research has been conducted by scientists to see if fungi are able to communicate with each other like humans can.
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