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Fungi Helped Kickstart the First Plant Life on Land

Fungi helped prehistoric plants transition to life on dry land nearly 500 million years ago. Today, they continue to work with plants and trees in a mutual exchange of nutrients.

ByJoshua Rapp Learn
Credit: forest71/Shutterstock

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Fungi are critical for making bread, beer, cheese and wine — basically, everything important in life. They can also cause pesky, and sometimes even fatal, infections in humans. Beyond that, they can be edible mushrooms or luxury truffles. Some make us hallucinate and others can kill us, perhaps after inducing said hallucination. Still others are deadly for animals and plants, whether it means zombifying ants or killing off trees and plants. Fungal diseases like chytrids are responsible for large-scale losses of entire populations of amphibians, while the deadly white-nose syndrome is wiping out bats across North America.

But what fewer people know is that fungi are also critical for the health and success of plant life on land overall. They exchange critical nutrient with plant roots and even provide a kind of information highway — sort of like a fungal internet — that can help plants warn their neighbors about ...

  • Joshua Rapp Learn

    Joshua Rapp Learn is an award-winning D.C.-based science journalist who frequently writes for Discover Magazine, covering topics about archaeology, wildlife, paleontology, space and other topics.

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