1Mushroom Burial Suit
There is a type of eco-burial that involves a mushroom suit, which digests your body after you die. Luke Perry was buried in one.
2. Scientists have discovered a species of fungus at Chernobyl that uses the gamma radiation from nuclear waste as a food source.
3. The Stonemaker Fungus is an Australian fungus that only emerges immediately following a forest fire. They live underground in a stone-like mycelium and pop up through the ashes 2-10 days after the fire, sometimes as infrequently as every 100 years.
4. There is a mushroom called "Chicken of the Woods." It tastes like chicken to some, but to others, it tastes like crab or lobster.
5. A mycologist named Paul Stamets argues that mushrooms will revolutionize our way of life by using mycelium fungus to clean polluted soil, make insecticides, treat smallpox, and even flu viruses.
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6Bourbon Evaporation Fungus
Every year, five million gallons of Kentucky's "angel's share" of bourbon evaporate, exposing the state to a black fungus known as "Baudoinia" that feeds on the ethanol vapor that the liquor releases as it ages.
7. Entomophthora muscae, a fungus epidemic, kills 75% of houseflies every autumn. It attacks their brains, forcing them to land on a surface, climb to the highest point, stand up on their front legs, and spread their wings. The fungus then erupts from their abdomen to be spread to other flies.
8. There is a tree fungus named gliocladium roseum that digests waste products and produces diesel-like chemicals when provoked. A scientist discovered it in the Patagonian rainforest and believes it could transform into a renewable energy source and alter our understanding of oil.
9. Alexander Fleming's mold could not produce penicillin fast enough for mass production, and it wasn't until 15 years later that one of his lab workers, Mary Hunt, tested a moldy cantaloupe in a grocery store and discovered the strain that is used to mass produce all penicillin today.
10. With its smell, a mushroom named Phallus indusiatus can induce spontaneous orgasms in women.
11Japan's National Fungus
Japan has a 'national fungus', Aspergillus oryzae, or koji, which is essential for brewing sake and making miso, soy sauce, and other traditional Japanese foods.
12. The thick white rind on the outside of a wheel of brie cheese is actually mold, specifically Penicillum candidum.
13. The Titanic was the site of discovery for tiny iron-eating microbes. These microbes form icicle-shaped "rusticles" composed of 35% iron compounds and a community of symbiotic microbes and fungi. By 2045, we expect them to dissolve the Titanic.
14. Seamus Blackley, an amateur Egyptologist, successfully baked bread with 4,500-year-old yeast extracted from ancient Egyptian ceramics, which were once used to bake bread and brew beer. During the extraction process, they injected a nutrient solution into the ceramics to activate the dormant yeast.
15. Vegemite is actually the leftover concentrated yeast mixture from the bottom of alcohol barrels.
16False Morels' Toxicity
False morels, a type of mushroom, contain a poison that can be metabolized into rocket fuel.
17. In 2011, a biology professor extracted yeast from a 45-million-year-old insect from Myanmar that was trapped in amber and brewed beer from it.
18. The split-gill mushroom has over 23,328 distinct sexes, but not all can successfully mate with one another. Each sex can only be fertile with 22,960 other sexes.
19. Magic mushrooms create a hyperconnected brain that induces trippy experiences. The active ingredient in the psychedelic drug, psilocybin, disrupts the normal communication networks in the brain by connecting "brain regions that don't normally talk together."
20. There is a species of Amazon fungus that feeds on plastic. It can survive on plastic alone, even without oxygen. It can potentially lead to new techniques for bioremediation.
21Bioluminescent Green Mushroom
The Bonin Islands near Japan are home to a mushroom known as "Green Pepe." It is named after its bioluminescent green glow.
22. The oyster mushroom is carnivorous, supplementing its nitrogen intake by preying on nematode worms. It can paralyze nematodes within minutes of contact and then extract their innards through their mouths.
23. The Vikings used urine-boiled fungus, known as touchwood, to create a smoldering material that allowed them to carry fire with them.
24. The parasitic Massospora fungus infects cicadas and replaces their genitals with a fungal stump. It also hijacks their brains with amphetamines and/or psilocybin, forcing them to mate non-stop and spread the fungal spores to infect other cicadas.
25. Podostroma cornu-dama is a mushroom native to Asia. It possesses such high toxicity that it can cause multiple organ failures, hair loss, and skin peeling, giving the illusion of radiation poisoning.