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The living world is connected
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by a vast kingdom of life
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we are only just beginning
to discover.
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Fungi.
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Sometimes, they reveal themselves
above ground as mushrooms.
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Mostly, though,
they live out of sight
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as hidden networks
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which have shaped life on land
as we know it.
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Fungi are the miracle-workers behind
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so many of our foods and medicines.
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Yet we know so little about them.
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They are some of
nature's greatest survivors,
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enduring through
five mass extinctions
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in the last billion years.
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So how have they adapted
to catastrophe and upheaval?
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And what might we learn from fungi
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to survive our own time
of radical change?
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When it comes to the study of fungi,
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there are few better places
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than Kew Gardens, in London...
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..home to one of the most diverse
collections of plants and fungi
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in the world.
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British biologist and writer
Merlin Sheldrake
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has dedicated his life to
unravelling the mysteries of fungi.
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We're really just at the very
beginning of our understanding
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of these astonishing organisms.
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It's long been known that mushrooms
can be delicious
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but might also poison you,
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cure you or give you visions.
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Neither plants nor animals,
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fungi actually make up
their own kingdom of life.
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In fact, scientists now estimate
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that for every plant species,
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there are as many
as ten fungal species.
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This building is the Fungarium.
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A team of dedicated scientists,
called mycologists,
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research fungi here,
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including Dr Ester Gaya.
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Hello. Hi.
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Welcome. Thank you.
Lovely to meet you.
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Right now, we are inside the largest
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collection of fungi in the world.
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The reference collection
is like a library.
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Let me show you this one.
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It's quite interesting.
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The collection holds around
a million specimens,
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gathered over centuries
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by collectors
including Charles Darwin.
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Each specimen helps illuminate
the history of life on our planet.
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But much of fungal life happens
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on a scale too small
for the naked eye to see.
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So to really understand them,
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we need to enter their world
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through the lens of a microscope.
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Most fungal life begins
with a spore.
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From each spore grow tubes,
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called hyphae,
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five times thinner than
a human hair.
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Their most urgent task is
to find food,
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so they start exploring.
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As these tubes branch and fuse,
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they form a delicate web,
called mycelium...
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..which can grow into a network
with billions of hyphal tips.
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Fungi are some of nature's most
remarkable chemists.
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Whereas animals eat by putting
food into their bodies...
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..fungi eat by
growing into their food.
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Digestive chemicals produced
by fungi can unlock food sources...
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..allowing them to be
broken down and absorbed.
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Despite having no eyes or nose,
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mycelium can
still sense the world...
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..smelling chemicals,
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seeing light,
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feeling heat,
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even detecting electricity.
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Fungi have to be sensitive
to what's going on around them.
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They have to use that information
to make decisions
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about what chemicals to
produce next, where to grow next.
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Fungi show that you don't have
to have a brain to solve problems.
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This is one of the puzzles
of mycelial networks.
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Their control and coordination
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is somehow everywhere at once
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and nowhere in particular.
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Mycelium can form elaborate
structures
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and grow to incredible sizes.
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In the wild,
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some fungi are known to span
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more than ten square kilometres.
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They also act as transport networks,
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shuttling water and chemicals
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on rivers of liquid within
their cells.
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This makes mushroom growth possible.
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A mushroom forms when fungus weaves
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hyphae into a tight bundle
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and inflates these
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with a pulse of water.
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With these abilities,
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fungi have thrived on
every continent.
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The Australian island of Tasmania
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is home to some of the
most ancient rainforests.
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The Tarkine is the second-largest
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temperate rainforest on Earth,
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five times the size
of New York City.
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These forests have existed
for over 65 million years...
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..providing a living window
to the time of the dinosaurs.
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It's the perfect hiding place
for fungi,
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calling adventurers from
around the world
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to discover new species
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and unravel their secrets.
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Old-growth forests are
extremely special places.
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You don't get to be an
old-growth forest
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in a very short space of time.
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It takes waves of populations
of different organisms
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rising and falling in each other's
wake over centuries,
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creating the
conditions for the next.
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Here in the Tarkine, there's an
amazing diversity of fungi
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because it's so wet.
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Merlin has come halfway
around the world to be here
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in mushroom season.
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At this time of year, there is
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a symphony of different colours,
shapes and sizes.
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Most fungi don't produce mushrooms,
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and even the fungi that do
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only produce them
for a small moment in a year.
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Fungi have long enriched
and enhanced life on this planet.
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But researchers think we've only
described about 5% of all
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the fungal species on Earth.
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I want to better understand
how they've survived for so long
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and what lessons they might
have for humanity
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as we wrestle with our most
urgent problems.
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Merlin's research has helped
reveal an essential relationship
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between fungi and plants.
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Incredibly, over 90% of plants
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rely on fungi to survive.
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From the earliest moments
of their lives,
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plants use chemicals to signal
to fungi in the soil...
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..guiding them towards the roots
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and even into them.
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A single plant can form
relationships
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with hundreds of different fungi.
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By working with fungi,
plants can gain greater access
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to nutrients for growth.
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In return, fungi receive food,
like sugars, that plants produce,
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extending their reach
far above the forest floor.
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Under each footstep, hundreds
of kilometres of mycelial networks
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weave their way through the soil.
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More than one tree can connect
to a single fungus,
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forming shared networks,
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sometimes called
"the wood-wide web".
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Through these networks,
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resources can move between plants
of different species
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throughout the forest.
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Older trees with the most
connections act as central hubs,
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allowing younger plants to
take root and thrive.
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Fungi can teach us about
the symbiotic way of life,
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about how all life is lived
in relationships
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with other organisms.
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In this sense,
life is collaboration...
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..and collaboration
is always a blend
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of cooperation and competition.
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Fungi are one of the
circulatory systems of the planet.
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If you were to stretch out
all of the mycelium on Earth,
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it would span half of the width
of the Milky Way galaxy.
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But perhaps the most overlooked
superpower of fungi
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is their ability to recycle life
through decomposition.
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Fungi are some of the only organisms
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capable of breaking down
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the complex chemistry of wood.
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After penetrating the wood,
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fungi deploy a range
of digestive chemicals...
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..breaking down plant matter
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and releasing the nutrients back
into the soil
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to be taken up by future generations
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of forest life.
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You think about the life of the tree
as a living tree, standing up,
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but then you think about the life
of the tree
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after the tree has fallen, creating
the conditions for other life.
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Without fungi, dead wood and other
plant matter would pile up and up.
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Other fungi specialise
in recycling animal life...
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..including this
fascinating species.
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The ghoul fungus
is living in the shadow
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of the body that was once there.
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Fungi can decompose
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but they can also grow mushrooms,
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the next stage in the food web.
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When these mushrooms are eaten,
they provide the nutrients
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that other organisms
can then use to grow...
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..connecting all life
in the forest...
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..from the smallest
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to the largest.
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So it helps us to think
about how the matter
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that composes our own bodies
will continue its journey
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after we die.
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Forests exist thanks to the
transformational powers of fungi.
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But fungi also offer world-changing
opportunities for humanity.
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In the Yunnan province of China,
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new discoveries are
showing how fungi
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might help address some of our
biggest environmental challenges.
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These forests are home to
over 6,000 species of mushroom,
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making Yunnan one of the most
diverse fungal ecosystems
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on the planet.
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Some of the oldest-known fossils
of fungi have been found here,
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as well as the earliest
evidence of mushroom farming,
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over 2,000 years ago.
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Today, the people of Yunnan forage
and farm over 800 edible mushrooms.
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Other species have been used in
traditional medicine for millennia,
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with health benefits modern medicine
is only now beginning to explore.
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With such diversity, it makes sense
that Yunnan is at the forefront
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of fungal research,
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led by biologists
like Peter Mortimer
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and his team from the
Kunming Institute of Botany.
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Yunnan is a wonderland for fungi.
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It's really muddy, it's rainy,
there's leeches everywhere,
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the mosquitoes are biting you,
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but it is so much fun
looking for fungi,
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these hardships don't really matter.
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To date, we've been part of
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describing more than 1,000
new species of fungi.
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Recently, Peter and his team made
a discovery
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that might help us deal
with plastic waste.
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00:20:10,880 --> 00:20:15,360
There's about 400 million tonnes
of plastic produced annually.
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Much of it enters
natural ecosystems,
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and chemicals inside the plastics
are leaching out
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into soil systems and water bodies.
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So, plastic is long-lived,
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it's absolutely everywhere,
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and it really is disastrous.
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We were collecting fungi
in the forest
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and we came across
a piece of plastic,
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and it was full of fungus.
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So we seal it up and we bring
it back to the laboratory.
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Lo and behold, we got
a whole range of fungi.
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Four of those are
new species to science.
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And even better, it turns out
those four species are able
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to break down plastic.
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So, under this microscope
in the petri dish, we can see
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how the mycelium from the fungi
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is penetrating this plastic sheet,
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breaking it apart,
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and then actively digesting it.
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It just shows
how rapidly fungi adapt
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in a change to the environment.
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Plastic has only come into existence
in the last, say, 100 years,
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yet fungi have the chemical arsenal
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to digest a range of plastics.
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If we can just find that one species
that can be very efficient
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00:21:36,560 --> 00:21:39,360
at breaking down the plastic,
we can start doing it at scales
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where real-world problems start
getting addressed.
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Other fungi studied here
have produced therapeutics used
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in organ transplants,
as well as treatments
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00:21:53,720 --> 00:21:56,160
for cancer and epilepsy.
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00:21:59,720 --> 00:22:03,960
The most famous fungal medicine,
penicillin, has saved
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00:22:03,960 --> 00:22:07,800
billions of lives by fighting
bacterial infections.
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00:22:14,000 --> 00:22:16,040
Under the microscope,
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00:22:16,040 --> 00:22:19,680
you can see penicillin holding back
bacterial growth.
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All of this lies within
the fungi around us.
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Until we find and discover
those fungi,
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we're never going to know what that
potential benefit could have been.
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00:22:40,840 --> 00:22:44,440
But breaking down pollutants and
healing people
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aren't the only benefits
that fungi offer us.
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In the United States,
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a revolutionary industry
is emerging...
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..driven by the idea that not only
can fungi break things down,
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they can also build them up.
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One company at the forefront is
Ecovative Design
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in upstate New York,
led by CEO Eben Bayer.
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We want to use mycelium
materials to solve problems
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that are really important.
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So, for us right now, that's
around animal agriculture
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and single-use plastics, which are
two of, like, the biggest
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material-related
pressures on the ecosystem.
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Researchers here have discovered
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how to grow materials
using mycelium...
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..replacing plastic products
with alternatives
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which are fully recyclable.
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The first step is we get
agricultural by-products -
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things like wood chips.
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That's where we
add the mycelial cells.
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Over the next few days,
they go crazy,
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they grow all around the wood chips.
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When you're done growing it,
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you always end up with a product
that's completely compatible
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with the planet.
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You get this thing that looks
like Styrofoam,
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but you can actually
compost in your garden.
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You can literally just throw
this anywhere in the environment.
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00:24:10,120 --> 00:24:12,760
And it would actually serve
as a nutrient for planet Earth,
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not a pollutant.
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Mycelium materials have been used
to grow everything
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from packaging to surfboards.
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00:24:21,040 --> 00:24:24,680
They can even replace fabrics,
like leather.
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00:24:27,080 --> 00:24:31,400
Researchers like senior scientist
Molly Boutin are working
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00:24:31,400 --> 00:24:34,240
towards even more surprising
materials.
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We really take our inspiration
from nature.
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So when we go out into the woods
and collect samples...
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If you look at fungi out
in the wild,
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they might be different colours...
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00:24:52,320 --> 00:24:55,440
..they form different structures.
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00:24:55,440 --> 00:24:59,960
The diversity of fungi is
very important because it means
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00:24:59,960 --> 00:25:03,680
that there are such a wide variety
of materials that we can make.
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00:25:07,920 --> 00:25:10,360
When you collect these different
samples and bring them back
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to the lab, you will see
that they grow in different ways.
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00:25:15,720 --> 00:25:19,080
As you do research, you're seeing
things and you're learning things
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00:25:19,080 --> 00:25:21,320
that no-one's ever seen before.
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00:25:32,360 --> 00:25:35,360
Mycelial materials touch so many
different industries,
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like, 1,001 things you can do.
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Medical applications is definitely
a passion of mine.
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Growing things like organs
with mycelium sounds way far out,
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00:25:45,680 --> 00:25:48,800
but my long-term dream would be able
to actually grow organs, or at least
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00:25:48,800 --> 00:25:51,840
the scaffolding for organs,
using mycelium.
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00:25:54,720 --> 00:25:59,320
If materials can be reimagined
in such a radical way,
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00:25:59,320 --> 00:26:04,400
what other opportunities might the
fungal kingdom hold for humanity?
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00:26:19,800 --> 00:26:21,800
Back in the Tarkine,
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fungi are shaping their environment
in ways that have
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00:26:25,440 --> 00:26:27,640
long been hidden from view.
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00:26:41,840 --> 00:26:47,880
A single mushroom can produce 30,000
microscopic spores each second.
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00:26:53,240 --> 00:26:57,080
As water evaporates from
the underside of the mushroom,
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00:26:57,080 --> 00:27:01,160
small wind currents
lift the spores into the air.
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00:27:07,320 --> 00:27:10,400
Fungal spores are the largest source
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00:27:10,400 --> 00:27:14,520
of airborne living particles
on Earth, equal to the weight
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00:27:14,520 --> 00:27:18,160
of half a million
blue whales each year.
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00:27:31,080 --> 00:27:33,200
As the spores rise,
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00:27:33,200 --> 00:27:35,640
they attract water vapour...
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00:27:37,240 --> 00:27:39,240
THUNDER RUMBLES
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00:27:39,240 --> 00:27:42,600
..eventually forming raindrops
by the billions.
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00:27:42,600 --> 00:27:46,640
THUNDER CRASHES
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00:27:53,480 --> 00:27:56,800
At least 16,000 species of mushroom
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release spores this way,
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00:27:59,120 --> 00:28:01,400
helping to stimulate rainfall
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00:28:01,400 --> 00:28:03,840
in forests all around the world.
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00:28:05,520 --> 00:28:07,560
It's a win for fungi.
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00:28:07,560 --> 00:28:12,200
Not only do they succeed
in spreading far and wide,
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00:28:12,200 --> 00:28:16,440
they also nurture the moist
environments necessary
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00:28:16,440 --> 00:28:18,160
for fungal life.
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00:28:19,680 --> 00:28:23,640
THUNDER RUMBLES
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00:28:34,760 --> 00:28:37,560
MERLIN:
The forest feels different at night.
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00:28:37,560 --> 00:28:41,000
It feels like it's inhabited
in a different way.
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00:28:43,840 --> 00:28:48,040
The whole forest is the outgrowth
of fungal relationships.
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00:28:52,240 --> 00:28:56,720
Everywhere you look, there are
stories unfolding around fungi.
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00:29:02,960 --> 00:29:06,280
Long-nosed potoroos here
in the Tarkine
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00:29:06,280 --> 00:29:10,240
have adapted to eat
over 60 species of fungi.
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00:29:15,120 --> 00:29:19,280
Potoroos rely on smell to find the
fungi that they need to survive.
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00:29:23,280 --> 00:29:26,080
Underground fungi produce
powerful odours that can
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00:29:26,080 --> 00:29:29,760
travel through layers of damp soil
out into the air.
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00:29:33,360 --> 00:29:37,920
By producing aromas to attract
animals, fungi which live
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00:29:37,920 --> 00:29:41,960
out of sight can
make themselves known,
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00:29:41,960 --> 00:29:45,400
ensuring their spores are spread.
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00:29:54,280 --> 00:29:59,320
Some fungi have figured out another
way to attract attention at night.
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00:30:03,040 --> 00:30:05,520
This is the ghost fungus.
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00:30:06,880 --> 00:30:10,400
It's one of around 90 species
of mushroom
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00:30:10,400 --> 00:30:12,640
known to glow in the dark.
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00:30:16,040 --> 00:30:19,040
Bioluminescence is another example
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00:30:19,040 --> 00:30:22,120
of the chemical wizardry of fungi.
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00:30:24,920 --> 00:30:29,920
Oxygen reacts with chemicals made
by the mushroom, producing light.
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00:30:42,600 --> 00:30:47,520
It's really exciting to see
these bioluminescent fungi glowing,
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00:30:47,520 --> 00:30:50,120
and when your eyes adjust
to the dark, they become
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00:30:50,120 --> 00:30:51,840
more striking and vivid.
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00:30:55,200 --> 00:30:58,920
Some species
glow to attract insects,
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00:30:58,920 --> 00:31:02,600
helping the fungi
by spreading their spores.
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00:31:09,400 --> 00:31:11,880
Why other species glow
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00:31:11,880 --> 00:31:13,640
remains a mystery.
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00:31:16,400 --> 00:31:21,040
Mushrooms have been illuminating
these forests for millions of years.
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00:31:23,560 --> 00:31:26,040
But that light may soon be fading.
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00:31:38,280 --> 00:31:42,000
Fungi may be some of nature's
greatest survivors,
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00:31:42,000 --> 00:31:46,080
but never before have they faced
a threat like us.
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00:31:58,840 --> 00:32:00,840
Forests like the Tarkine,
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00:32:00,840 --> 00:32:03,120
where fungi are most diverse,
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00:32:03,120 --> 00:32:09,440
are being cleared at the rate of one
football field every two minutes.
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00:32:13,880 --> 00:32:18,000
Of the old-growth forest that once
existed around the world,
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00:32:18,000 --> 00:32:20,720
only one fifth remains.
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00:32:24,400 --> 00:32:29,200
Some trees in the Tarkine
can live for over 2,000 years.
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00:32:33,680 --> 00:32:38,120
Ripping out these ancient trees
disrupts the wood-wide web.
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00:32:42,160 --> 00:32:46,320
Deforestation interrupts
other crucial benefits
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00:32:46,320 --> 00:32:48,680
fungi provide the world.
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00:32:48,680 --> 00:32:53,120
Each year, mycelium draws down
more than five billion tonnes
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00:32:53,120 --> 00:32:55,880
of carbon from the atmosphere,
which would otherwise
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00:32:55,880 --> 00:32:57,880
drive climate change.
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00:33:03,400 --> 00:33:07,320
When I'm in these burnt,
clear-cut areas,
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00:33:07,320 --> 00:33:10,280
I'm reminded of
the Library of Alexandria,
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00:33:10,280 --> 00:33:13,920
which burned down, and much of the
knowledge and the wisdom
380
00:33:13,920 --> 00:33:15,840
of the ancient world was lost.
381
00:33:15,840 --> 00:33:18,880
Imagine that, but on a much
greater scale.
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00:33:20,000 --> 00:33:22,040
We're burning the library,
383
00:33:22,040 --> 00:33:26,000
a library of different ways to rise
to the challenge of living.
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00:33:31,040 --> 00:33:33,800
What aspects of this library
might be crucial for
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00:33:33,800 --> 00:33:37,640
the planet's ecosystems and
for humans in the future?
386
00:34:03,320 --> 00:34:05,760
We risk losing entire branches
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00:34:05,760 --> 00:34:09,520
of the fungal tree of life
to extinction.
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00:34:13,160 --> 00:34:16,800
But if fungi
have taught us anything,
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00:34:16,800 --> 00:34:21,640
it's that those who can
adapt, survive.
390
00:34:43,640 --> 00:34:46,680
In a world rapidly changing,
391
00:34:46,680 --> 00:34:49,920
it makes sense to study
the most resilient players.
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00:34:52,120 --> 00:34:56,000
Merlin and other scientists
are working together to
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00:34:56,000 --> 00:34:59,440
map the Earth's fungal networks -
394
00:34:59,440 --> 00:35:02,600
a vital step in better understanding
395
00:35:02,600 --> 00:35:05,320
the behaviour of fungi,
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00:35:05,320 --> 00:35:09,000
and a critical tool in protecting
their ecosystems.
397
00:35:10,600 --> 00:35:15,160
Every sample collected builds
on the knowledge already gathered
398
00:35:15,160 --> 00:35:18,720
by scientists
and traditional cultures -
399
00:35:18,720 --> 00:35:23,120
knowledge we pass on to generations
yet to come.
400
00:35:43,400 --> 00:35:47,160
With millions of fungi
still to discover...
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00:35:49,120 --> 00:35:52,400
..it's a journey
we're just beginning.
32452
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