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How Mushrooms Could Hold the Key to Our Long-Term Survival as a Species

103 points| DiabloD3 | 11 years ago |motherboard.vice.com | reply

23 comments

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[+] FreakyT|11 years ago|reply
Interesting. The idea that mushrooms could purify pollutants seems reminiscent of this movie: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0087544/
[+] kijin|11 years ago|reply
Fungi can purify pollutants, but they can also emit mycotoxins that are extremely harmful to us. So you may have to wear a hazmat suit while the purification is taking place...

Yeah, that sounds just like Nausicaa. The manga it's based on (also by Miyazaki) is one of my all-time favorites.

[+] Gregordinary|11 years ago|reply
While the vice article suggests that mushrooms will make food for themselves or other organisms from the pollutants they pick up, not all compounds are broken down in mushrooms. For example it's suggested not to eat mushrooms from old apple orchards as they may have a higher lead content.

It still may have a practical application to treat soil in an area (as long as you harvest the mushrooms) but not all of the compounds drawn up by mushrooms are broken down.

http://www.fungimag.com/winter-2010-articles/shavit-morels.p...

There have been some other studies where mushroom mounds were created on the boundaries of farms to help collect phosphates and nitrates in water runoff with some promising success. Couldn't find the specific study I was thinking of with a quick search, will update this comment if I find it.

[+] rosser|11 years ago|reply
The mushrooms aren't necessarily being used to break down the compounds, so much as to facilitate their sequestration. You can then harvest and destroy the mushrooms and have clean soil.
[+] heydenberk|11 years ago|reply
I'm sympathetic to the argument (and I enjoy Paul Staments) but this article is a poorly-written regurgitation of Stamets' ideas, which adds little value and makes some overly strong unsourced statements along the way.
[+] smt88|11 years ago|reply
Which statements are too strong?
[+] hunglee2|11 years ago|reply
You can also make or rather grow bio-degradeable packaging solutions from Mycelium. We can look forward to many applications from funghi - got to support this
[+] bunkydoo|11 years ago|reply
It's almost like nature has code behind it we can fork and iterate upon
[+] anonbanker|11 years ago|reply
This was a kickstarter commercial. Seems CNN didn't purchase Vice's integrity when they bought everything.
[+] rosser|11 years ago|reply
The video in TFA is so worth the 18-and-change minutes it takes to watch.
[+] e40|11 years ago|reply
It would be nice if you could include a "why" for statements like that.
[+] mqsoh|11 years ago|reply
Is it by eating them? I like mushrooms.
[+] stolio|11 years ago|reply
Would this article make the front-page if the word mushroom was replaced with mycelium or fungus which removed the hope of legitimizing psychedelics? I doubt it, even in the article they extol the virtues of "magical" mushrooms:

> While it’s also being researched for uses in less cosmic concerns like breaking addiction and treat​ing cancer, psilocybin’s third-eye-opening properties aren’t superficial. Some the​ories argue that modern human intelligence itself was borne of consumption of the stuff. Magic mushrooms are something about which Stamets is (naturally) an expert...

OTOH, maybe it's good to have the word mushroom in the title since it also signals to the rest of us that it's probably going to be an article by and for fans of psilocybin.

[+] coderzach|11 years ago|reply
I doubt anyone read the title, and then upvoted, because they assumed it was an article about how psychedelics held the key to humanity's survival.
[+] smt88|11 years ago|reply
I think that very few people clicked this because they thought that psychedelic mushrooms could somehow solve the problems threatening the human race (e.g. climate change, overpopulation, water shortages, nuclear weapons, etc.)

My bet would be that they thought what the title wanted them to think: "I wonder how mushrooms are good to feed humans and/or save the ecosystem?"

Just because some readers of HN use drugs doesn't mean they're any less science-y or that they're idiotic, blind fans of psychedelic mushrooms.

[+] api|11 years ago|reply
If the truth can be told so as to be understood, it will be believed.