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InvisibleveggieM

Registered: 07/25/04
Posts: 17,504
The Fungus That Ate the World
    #11166268 - 10/01/09 09:05 PM (14 years, 6 months ago)

The Fungus That Ate the World
October 1, 2009 - sciencemag.org

Scientists claim they have identified an ancient fungus that flourished about 250 million years ago, feeding on dead trees as it spread across the planet. Those remains could provide a crucial clue to the identity of what killed off much of Earth's plant and animal life at the time, although some researchers remain skeptical.

Earth's history is marked by several mass extinctions. Probably the best-known of these is at the so-called Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary, about 65 million years ago, the catastrophe that wiped out the dinosaurs and many other terrestrial and marine species. All over the world, samples of the sediments that were deposited then show traces of iridium, an element that is rare on Earth but common in asteroids, pointing to a massive impact.

A more mysterious mass extinction happened about 250 million years ago, marking the end of the Permian period and the beginning of the Triassic. Almost all marine life vanished, as did nearly three-quarters of land animals--almost all of which resided on a single, giant continent known as Pangaea. But the cause of the extinctions has remained elusive. There's no evidence of an impact, only scattered signs of lava flows and hints of possible sea-level rise or changes in ocean circulation.

In 1996, researchers tested the chemical remains of a genus of micro-organisms called Reduviasporonites, which are common in the Permian-Triassic (P-Tr) boundary layer. They concluded that the organisms were fungi, but later analyses suggested that the organisms were a form of algae. Now, members of an international team say they have confirmed not only that the ubiquitous Reduviasporonites were fungi but also that their primary diet was dead trees--something that might provide a decisive clue about the type of catastrophe that ended the Permian period.

The team analyzed carbon and nitrogen isotopes from samples of Reduviasporonites. As the researchers report today in Geology, those analyses identified chemicals unique to Reduviasporonites, whose reign spanned the Permian and Triassic periods, and other compounds associated with dead tree matter, within the same microfossils. Astrobiologist and lead author Mark Sephton of Imperial College London says the analyses show that the organism fed on dead wood. In addition, he notes, the Reduviasporonites microfossils have been found in sediments deposited at the P-Tr boundary all across what was then Pangaea. "This suggests that we are looking at something truly global in effect."

Sephton explains that for Reduviasporonites to be so common at the P-Tr boundary, they must have thrived on a disaster that brought about "a dramatic change in the environment." The most likely cause, he says, is a massive release of sulfur dioxide and other noxious gases from volcanic eruptions. Those gases would have caused highly acidified rain, enough to poison most of the planet, killing trees and creating a global feast for Reduviasporonites. "When things turned really bad," Sephton says, "they were most at home."

It's a good story if it turns out to be true, says paleontologist C. Kevin Boyce of the University of Chicago in Illinois. The analyses of the carbon isotopes provide the "strongest evidence" of a fungal lifestyle for Reduviasporonites, he says. They do "a much better job than previous work" in identifying components of Reduviasporonites versus bits of organic matter from fossilized dead trees. So was Reduviasporonites a fungus? "Maybe," Boyce says. "What [the team's] work does is at least reopen that door."

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OfflineScavengerType
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Registered: 01/24/08
Posts: 5,784
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Re: The Fungus That Ate the World [Re: veggie]
    #11167599 - 10/02/09 12:32 AM (14 years, 6 months ago)

Stamets has been calming this shit happened for years. All that has happened is they've found the fossils of the fungus.

Stamets has a funny habit of being proved right by time even when his statements seem somewhat implausible. I recall he was claiming some mushrooms to grow 20 ft high or something like that during this phase.


--------------------
"Have you ever seen what happens when a grenade goes off in a school? Do you really know what you’re doing when you order shock and awe? Are you prepared to kneel beside a dying soldier and tell him why he went to Iraq, or why he went to any war?"
"The things that are done in the name of the shareholder are, to me, as terrifying as the things that are done—dare I say it—in the name of God. Montesquieu said, "There have never been so many civil wars as in the Kingdom of God." And I begin to feel that’s true. The shareholder is the excuse for everything."
- Author and former M6/M5 agent John le Carré on Democracy Now.
Conquer's Club

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OfflineTwiztidsage
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Registered: 12/05/08
Posts: 8,089
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Re: The Fungus That Ate the World [Re: ScavengerType]
    #11167931 - 10/02/09 02:09 AM (14 years, 6 months ago)

Saprophytes love the disturbed habitats.....

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OfflineTwiztidsage
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Registered: 12/05/08
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Re: The Fungus That Ate the World [Re: Twiztidsage]
    #11168148 - 10/02/09 03:45 AM (14 years, 6 months ago)

Here is another article about it for those interested.

Science Daily

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InvisibleDango_Bill
Seven
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Registered: 12/01/07
Posts: 307
Re: The Fungus That Ate the World [Re: ScavengerType]
    #11168478 - 10/02/09 07:10 AM (14 years, 6 months ago)

Quote:

ScavengerType said:
I recall he was claiming some mushrooms to grow 20 ft high or something like that during this phase.




That may well have been possible. I'm pretty sure atmospheric oxygen levels were much, much higher than they are today during that time period. Dragonflies grew to the size of eagles, ferns towered fifty feet tall, and ten-foot long centipedes crawled the land.

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OfflineTwiztidsage
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Registered: 12/05/08
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Re: The Fungus That Ate the World [Re: Dango_Bill]
    #11169928 - 10/02/09 01:22 PM (14 years, 6 months ago)

It was the tallest organism living at that time. Plants were only like 2 feet tall way back then.

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