Discovery Science: Earth Fungi – Useful and Harmful Fungi

Earth Science: Fungi – Useful and Harmful Fungi

Many fungi are considered useful due to the valuable services their cultivation can provide for humanity, while others are considered harmful because they may inflict significant harvest losses or cause disease.

With the aid of photosynthesis, plants produce an annual biomass (the total mass of organic material) of several billion tons. Over time, this biomass needs to be broken down again so that all the nutrients locked up in the material can be made available for use by other organisms and returned into the cycle of nature.

Without this decomposition process, life on Earth would quickly come to a standstill. Fungi play a very significant role in this re- cycling, particularly in the breakdown of wood and other plant materials.

Fungi in the service of humanity

Humans have consumed fungi since ancient times, and fatal accidents have often occurred due to the potent toxins found in some species. On the other hand, the production of bread, wine, and beer-depicted in tomb art dating as far back as ancient Egypt-would not
have been possible without the use of fungi.

Moreover, there are now a number of commercial products that are produced on a large scale with the aid of fungi, such as citric acid or vitamin B2, and of course antibiotics, such as penicillin.

Disease-causing fungi

There are a number of fungi that can be dangerous for humans; these include Cryptococcus neoformans, which can cause meningitis and is especially dangerous to people with a weakened immune system.

If left untreated, this disease is nearly always fatal. Less dangerous, but still unpleasant, are fungal infections of the skin, such as foot fungus (athlete’s foot). Fungi that can trigger diseases among plants, such as loose smut (Ustilago avenae), used to cause harvest losses of up to 90 percent in the giant monocultures of North America.

Coffee rust (Hemileiavastatrix) was the main cause behind the demise of the entire coffee production industry in Sri Lanka during the 19th century, with the result that there was a complete conversion to the cultivation of tea instead.

SEARCH FOR TRUFFLES

Among humans, the most desired of the edible fungi are truffles, which are considered a delicacy and can be very expensive. The high cost of these fungi is mainly due to the fact that they grow under the soil surface and therefore can be difficult to find.

However, animals with sensitive noses can detect the strong odor of truffles. Therefore, truffle collectors use pigs or specially trained sniffer dogs to detect these valuable delicacies hidden in forests.

THE DISCOVERY OF PENICILLIN

In 1928, the bacteriologist Alexander Fleming made a discovery that proved to be one of the most significant in the history of medicine. He observed that a bacterial culture, contaminated by a fungus, had formed a narrow zone around it without bacteria.

His assumption that the fungus was releasing a substance that inhibited growth proved correct, and this metabolic substance, Penicillin, introduced the age of antibiotics.