Research has been conducted by scientists to see if fungi are able to communicate with each other like humans can.
Fungi are taking the U.S. by storm — and not in the good way.
Scientists say fungi produce electrical patterns similar to the human language, sparking interest in their underground ...
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Fungi May Have Their Own ‘Language'-and Scientists Think It's Happening Right Beneath Our Feet
You've probably noticed mushrooms popping up everywhere lately, from lion's mane lattes to reishi tinctures. But here's ...
The results illustrated a wide spectrum of mushroom chatter. When water was added to a single mushroom, information activity ...
Scientists discover that forest mushrooms communicate through underground electrical signals—and even urine can change the ...
Yunnan Province in southwestern China is a global biodiversity hotspot, accommodating an incredible variety of plants and ...
Credit: Boris Vinatzer Fungi may hold a little-known key to ice formation in clouds. Can fungi affect the weather? It may ...
Fungi have been recorded having conversations, with a scientist finding they can communicate with a language similar to that of humans. Over the last decade, researchers have found evidence that ...
A new study from Kiel University shows how the massive exchange of mobile genetic elements between fungi can impair their ...
Sphaerobolus stellatus, or Cannonball fungus, as it lands on nearby plants, could be spread by herbivores grazing and eliminating the spores from their systems.
For a while, scientists thought the trillions of microbes on our bodies lived in landscapes connected to the outside world — our skin, hair, and gut — but research in the last few years has shown that ...
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