Woody Wide Web

Kevin Beiler made a spatial "Map" of fungal connections between trees in a 30 x 30 meter plot of forest. The most well connected tree had forty-seven connections via fungal networks to other trees.

The most amount of "hops" it took to get from this most well networked tree to any other tree in the plot was 3. Three hops to get from point A to any point B. The low number of hops was entirely caused by the older trees having more connections to each other than any of the younger trees.

This pattern of connectivity is the same in the World Wide Web: the great majority of web pages have just a few connections and a sparse few pages have many, many connections. This pattern repeats in almost all networks, from global air travel to neuronal linkages. It's all about the "well connected" hub. Well connected hubs are prime targets for network destruction but they are almost thematic in everything we see. Decentralization is key.

As with people, younger trees have fewer connections to mycorrhizal networks and older trees have many. Even in the forest, it's not "what" you know it's "who" you know.

#Alexandria

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How the hell do you verify a connection? Like between two trees.

How do you verify that your hand is working? Your brain sends signals that propagates to your arm telling it to move, and if you your brain gets the feedback it expects, its working.

Its all signal propagation. For any problem you need to solve, you can only do one thing - send a signal, and hope that the communication lines are working correctly execute on what you want.

Yeah but how do you measure it between two very different trees. What are we measuring and from where. Electric current?

Proximity, chemical composition most likely. Thought you meant about how does a tree verify its connection.

No no. Yeah chemical composition makes sense. Along with soil maybe. Fascinating. Its like they on ham radio and we figuring out tree talk.

Here is the research paper it came from. The Methods he used are in there. Be warned, it’s dry!

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/255978930_Mycorrhizal_networks_Mechanisms_ecology_and_modelling

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"Microsatellite DNA markers were used to identify tree and fungal genotypes isolated from mycorrhizas and for comparison with reference tree boles above-ground."

https://besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/1365-2745.12387#main1

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All right enough of the nerd talk 🙄

The nerd talk will continue to grow on nostr 🫡

I find this note fascinating and love that this is on #Nostr as I'd never see this on the dead bird 🐦 app

I used to see all kinds of cool stuff over there. Now it's just trash.

There was a phenomenal RadioLab podcast on this very subject.

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Even a tree wants to be a fungi

That is so dope.

Genius! "Microsatellite DNA markers were used to identify tree and fungal genotypes isolated from mycorrhizas and for comparison with reference tree boles above-ground."

Original study:

https://besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/1365-2745.12387#main1

I was communication accomplished via these networks for trees?

How’d he get a picture of my toenail!?

proof that centralization works, and is natural

So pretty 😍 Ima all about #spiders and how they weave webs 🕸️ right now … #Nature is lit 🔥

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