Fungal Arbitrage

PREMISES:

1.) A Single Mycelial network spans differential concentrations of phosphorus in soils.

2.) The same network connects to multiple plants.

3.) Plants in areas of low concentrations of phosphorus pay a higher carbon price to receive phosphorus.

4.) Plants in high concentrations of phosphorus pay a lower carbon price.

Mycelium, as it turns out, is quite good at figuring out the free market. Using energy consuming "active transport" via motor proteins that travel along microtubules in the mycelial network, phosphorus from phosphorus-rich areas are transported to plants living in phosphorus-poor areas. The mycelium then sells that phosphorus at the higher price to the plants that were already paying a higher price.

Even fungus knows which way the wind is blowing and adjusts it's trading strategy accordingly. It would seem that the energy used in transporting the goods is more than made up for by the energy gained at the point of sale.

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**Energy** is the currency of nature.

chemically stored sunlight (carbo-hydrate biomass) in the soil wood wide web of life

or materialized machine sweat (rare numbers pow) on the world wide web of trust

From Plenty to Scarcity: In Stark Contrast to Fungal Arbitrage

Birch and fir were studied as fungal connected pairs in a forest.

The mycorhizzal pathways between birch and fir seedlings allows carbon to flow for effect. In this case carbon flowed to the fir seedlings. Suzanne Simard discovered (using radio labeled carbon) that 6% of the carbon originally produced by the birch ended up in the fir seedlings.

When the fir seedlings were in shade they received even more carbon from the birches. The birches were passing their hard forged carbon skeletons (sugars) to the fir seedlings. By doing so they were definitely giving the firs a "leg up" on surviving.

So, the question becomes: under what circumstances do the mycorhizzal network and some of its connected trees decide not to seek "higher prices" for nutrients and act, instead, as a socialist association?

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Oui Chef! I wish more people would read Paul Stamets. Keep up the great work.

Thank you, Chef. I appreciate that.

That pic comes from a video I show in class for cellular processing including transport for 10th grade. Good stuff. The Inner Life of the Cell Animation

YouTube ยท XVIVO Scientific Animation

Jul 11, 2011

Yup. I know that video very well. They have many and they are so damn good. I love them. It should be noted that many of the models are based off of known molecular structures.