Imagine If Giant Mushrooms Grew on Earth
400 million years ago, giant mushrooms the size of houses dominated the land. Yet,
over time, they disappeared and evolved into
the smaller versions we know and love today.
But what if we found a way to bring them back?
This is Science Fiction,
and here's what would happen During the Devonian Period, about
420 to 350 million years ago, plants had not
yet fully flourished and were merely a few
feet tall. Still, massive mushrooms, were plentiful, due to the
rich supply of bacteria found in the soil.
This special soil, known as harbored a crust of living organisms made up of fungi, mosses, green
algae, bacteria and lichens. At this point in time, much of Earth's land was covered
in this soil, which made it the perfect breeding ground for fungi. Believe it
or not, ancient mushrooms didn't have caps, which thankfully allowed generous
sunlight for vascular plants to evolve. Prototaxites were pivotal in their
progress, as they acted as symbiotic roots for plants. The mushrooms' feeding
tubes, secreted organic acids to dissolve rocks and extract nutrients in a
process known as Plants, in turn, would absorb the sunlight through
photosynthesis and transfer energy to the mushrooms. They were essentially
besties for life.
If it weren't for
gigantic fungi, we may not have forests or oxygen rich environments to harbor
complex life-forms, such as ourselves. Today, vast networks of allow trees to
transfer essential nutrients to one another. It's like a fully organic form of
the internet, minus all the spam and memes. In the mushroom network, things go
viral in a totally different way. Fungi has been used to cure deadly viruses and
comprises the basis of lifesaving antibiotics, such as penicillin. They've also
been found to digest hydrocarbons in petroleum and polyurethane plastics, and
absorb heavy metals like mercury.
Scientists have even
discovered a species of fungi in Chernobyl that feeds on radiation, which
converts it into chemical energy in a process called In a way, having mega
mushrooms all over the planet could solve a lot of problems like pollution or
cleaning up oil spills and radioactive areas. But what are the risks? Could
giant mushrooms hurt our planet?
Although many forms of
fungi are beneficial, out of 1.5 million species on Earth, at least 300 of them
are poisonous to us. If we tried to introduce them back into our ecosystem, we
would need to be very careful about their toxicity. As the most widely distributed
organisms on Earth, many of them remain a mystery to us. We would need a team
of experts to manage their harvest around the world, just as forest managers regulate
our tree harvesting. Without proper care, these mighty mushrooms could gobble
up all the vital nutrients for plant life to grow and become an invasive
species. And since fungi also inhale oxygen and exhale carbon dioxide, humans
would have a rampant rival for the air we breathe. Giant mushrooms likely
couldn't survive in today's world unless they were carefully contained, as
there is already too much competition from plants.
Scientists are still
debating why prototaxites went extinct, but there are a couple of theories. Either
they didn't grow fast enough to recover from animals eating them, or the
abundance of vascular plants out-competed them for nutrients. So maybe their
hearty size actually proved their downfall. Nevertheless, if we found a way to
grow these giants again, we could use mushrooms in many interesting ways. How
about, sun reflectors, sources of shade, culinary delicacies, medicine, garbage
absorbers, transcendental healing, or at the very least, trampolines to bounce
around on! Okay, that's maybe not the safest idea, but it would really put the
fun in fungi.
In all honesty, we have
a lot to thank our ginormous fungi friends for. They fostered the forests, which
gave us oxygen rich environments, allowing complex animals like humans to
evolve.
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