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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:45,120 --> 00:00:47,480 The living world is connected 2 00:00:47,480 --> 00:00:49,520 by a vast kingdom of life 3 00:00:49,520 --> 00:00:52,360 we are only just beginning to discover. 4 00:01:03,640 --> 00:01:05,120 Fungi. 5 00:01:21,560 --> 00:01:26,160 Sometimes, they reveal themselves above ground as mushrooms. 6 00:01:31,960 --> 00:01:36,920 Mostly, though, they live out of sight 7 00:01:36,920 --> 00:01:38,640 as hidden networks 8 00:01:38,640 --> 00:01:41,880 which have shaped life on land as we know it. 9 00:01:47,600 --> 00:01:50,320 Fungi are the miracle-workers behind 10 00:01:50,320 --> 00:01:53,040 so many of our foods and medicines. 11 00:01:59,320 --> 00:02:02,560 Yet we know so little about them. 12 00:02:08,040 --> 00:02:11,600 They are some of nature's greatest survivors, 13 00:02:11,600 --> 00:02:14,520 enduring through five mass extinctions 14 00:02:14,520 --> 00:02:16,680 in the last billion years. 15 00:02:19,240 --> 00:02:23,040 So how have they adapted to catastrophe and upheaval? 16 00:02:26,240 --> 00:02:29,440 And what might we learn from fungi 17 00:02:29,440 --> 00:02:32,680 to survive our own time of radical change? 18 00:02:48,040 --> 00:02:51,000 When it comes to the study of fungi, 19 00:02:51,000 --> 00:02:52,800 there are few better places 20 00:02:52,800 --> 00:02:54,920 than Kew Gardens, in London... 21 00:02:57,240 --> 00:03:01,440 ..home to one of the most diverse collections of plants and fungi 22 00:03:01,440 --> 00:03:02,880 in the world. 23 00:03:04,680 --> 00:03:08,280 British biologist and writer Merlin Sheldrake 24 00:03:08,280 --> 00:03:12,800 has dedicated his life to unravelling the mysteries of fungi. 25 00:03:14,320 --> 00:03:17,200 We're really just at the very beginning of our understanding 26 00:03:17,200 --> 00:03:19,440 of these astonishing organisms. 27 00:03:21,520 --> 00:03:24,840 It's long been known that mushrooms can be delicious 28 00:03:24,840 --> 00:03:27,120 but might also poison you, 29 00:03:27,120 --> 00:03:30,080 cure you or give you visions. 30 00:03:33,280 --> 00:03:34,920 Neither plants nor animals, 31 00:03:34,920 --> 00:03:38,200 fungi actually make up their own kingdom of life. 32 00:03:40,680 --> 00:03:43,720 In fact, scientists now estimate 33 00:03:43,720 --> 00:03:46,280 that for every plant species, 34 00:03:46,280 --> 00:03:50,080 there are as many as ten fungal species. 35 00:03:54,960 --> 00:03:57,040 This building is the Fungarium. 36 00:03:58,440 --> 00:04:01,800 A team of dedicated scientists, called mycologists, 37 00:04:01,800 --> 00:04:03,840 research fungi here, 38 00:04:03,840 --> 00:04:05,840 including Dr Ester Gaya. 39 00:04:05,840 --> 00:04:07,600 Hello. Hi. 40 00:04:07,600 --> 00:04:10,120 Welcome. Thank you. Lovely to meet you. 41 00:04:11,640 --> 00:04:14,720 Right now, we are inside the largest 42 00:04:14,720 --> 00:04:17,000 collection of fungi in the world. 43 00:04:17,000 --> 00:04:19,480 The reference collection is like a library. 44 00:04:21,360 --> 00:04:22,840 Let me show you this one. 45 00:04:23,920 --> 00:04:25,400 It's quite interesting. 46 00:04:25,400 --> 00:04:27,680 The collection holds around a million specimens, 47 00:04:27,680 --> 00:04:29,600 gathered over centuries 48 00:04:29,600 --> 00:04:32,120 by collectors including Charles Darwin. 49 00:04:34,480 --> 00:04:38,400 Each specimen helps illuminate the history of life on our planet. 50 00:04:44,600 --> 00:04:46,360 But much of fungal life happens 51 00:04:46,360 --> 00:04:49,240 on a scale too small for the naked eye to see. 52 00:04:50,960 --> 00:04:52,920 So to really understand them, 53 00:04:52,920 --> 00:04:54,680 we need to enter their world 54 00:04:54,680 --> 00:04:57,080 through the lens of a microscope. 55 00:05:06,720 --> 00:05:10,920 Most fungal life begins with a spore. 56 00:05:14,080 --> 00:05:16,720 From each spore grow tubes, 57 00:05:16,720 --> 00:05:18,520 called hyphae, 58 00:05:18,520 --> 00:05:21,520 five times thinner than a human hair. 59 00:05:26,360 --> 00:05:30,040 Their most urgent task is to find food, 60 00:05:30,040 --> 00:05:31,600 so they start exploring. 61 00:05:38,080 --> 00:05:40,880 As these tubes branch and fuse, 62 00:05:40,880 --> 00:05:44,560 they form a delicate web, called mycelium... 63 00:05:48,120 --> 00:05:52,680 ..which can grow into a network with billions of hyphal tips. 64 00:05:56,840 --> 00:05:59,960 Fungi are some of nature's most remarkable chemists. 65 00:06:01,760 --> 00:06:05,240 Whereas animals eat by putting food into their bodies... 66 00:06:06,560 --> 00:06:09,240 ..fungi eat by growing into their food. 67 00:06:12,520 --> 00:06:17,000 Digestive chemicals produced by fungi can unlock food sources... 68 00:06:18,840 --> 00:06:21,320 ..allowing them to be broken down and absorbed. 69 00:06:25,880 --> 00:06:29,000 Despite having no eyes or nose, 70 00:06:29,000 --> 00:06:31,960 mycelium can still sense the world... 71 00:06:34,440 --> 00:06:36,320 ..smelling chemicals, 72 00:06:36,320 --> 00:06:37,960 seeing light, 73 00:06:37,960 --> 00:06:39,960 feeling heat, 74 00:06:39,960 --> 00:06:42,280 even detecting electricity. 75 00:06:50,320 --> 00:06:54,480 Fungi have to be sensitive to what's going on around them. 76 00:06:54,480 --> 00:06:56,800 They have to use that information to make decisions 77 00:06:56,800 --> 00:07:00,080 about what chemicals to produce next, where to grow next. 78 00:07:03,360 --> 00:07:07,400 Fungi show that you don't have to have a brain to solve problems. 79 00:07:10,840 --> 00:07:14,680 This is one of the puzzles of mycelial networks. 80 00:07:14,680 --> 00:07:17,200 Their control and coordination 81 00:07:17,200 --> 00:07:19,640 is somehow everywhere at once 82 00:07:19,640 --> 00:07:21,520 and nowhere in particular. 83 00:07:28,280 --> 00:07:32,560 Mycelium can form elaborate structures 84 00:07:32,560 --> 00:07:34,800 and grow to incredible sizes. 85 00:07:39,720 --> 00:07:41,480 In the wild, 86 00:07:41,480 --> 00:07:43,480 some fungi are known to span 87 00:07:43,480 --> 00:07:46,360 more than ten square kilometres. 88 00:07:49,440 --> 00:07:53,120 They also act as transport networks, 89 00:07:53,120 --> 00:07:55,480 shuttling water and chemicals 90 00:07:55,480 --> 00:07:58,480 on rivers of liquid within their cells. 91 00:08:03,320 --> 00:08:06,000 This makes mushroom growth possible. 92 00:08:13,480 --> 00:08:16,840 A mushroom forms when fungus weaves 93 00:08:16,840 --> 00:08:19,160 hyphae into a tight bundle 94 00:08:19,160 --> 00:08:21,080 and inflates these 95 00:08:21,080 --> 00:08:23,280 with a pulse of water. 96 00:08:32,400 --> 00:08:34,360 With these abilities, 97 00:08:34,360 --> 00:08:37,280 fungi have thrived on every continent. 98 00:08:47,920 --> 00:08:50,480 The Australian island of Tasmania 99 00:08:50,480 --> 00:08:53,920 is home to some of the most ancient rainforests. 100 00:09:03,160 --> 00:09:06,640 The Tarkine is the second-largest 101 00:09:06,640 --> 00:09:09,400 temperate rainforest on Earth, 102 00:09:09,400 --> 00:09:12,200 five times the size of New York City. 103 00:09:16,360 --> 00:09:21,000 These forests have existed for over 65 million years... 104 00:09:24,360 --> 00:09:28,120 ..providing a living window to the time of the dinosaurs. 105 00:09:32,760 --> 00:09:36,120 It's the perfect hiding place for fungi, 106 00:09:36,120 --> 00:09:39,440 calling adventurers from around the world 107 00:09:39,440 --> 00:09:41,360 to discover new species 108 00:09:41,360 --> 00:09:43,680 and unravel their secrets. 109 00:09:56,840 --> 00:10:00,040 Old-growth forests are extremely special places. 110 00:10:00,040 --> 00:10:02,600 You don't get to be an old-growth forest 111 00:10:02,600 --> 00:10:05,360 in a very short space of time. 112 00:10:05,360 --> 00:10:08,480 It takes waves of populations of different organisms 113 00:10:08,480 --> 00:10:12,040 rising and falling in each other's wake over centuries, 114 00:10:12,040 --> 00:10:14,760 creating the conditions for the next. 115 00:10:18,200 --> 00:10:21,280 Here in the Tarkine, there's an amazing diversity of fungi 116 00:10:21,280 --> 00:10:23,160 because it's so wet. 117 00:10:28,320 --> 00:10:32,400 Merlin has come halfway around the world to be here 118 00:10:32,400 --> 00:10:33,800 in mushroom season. 119 00:10:35,120 --> 00:10:37,520 At this time of year, there is 120 00:10:37,520 --> 00:10:42,240 a symphony of different colours, shapes and sizes. 121 00:10:45,160 --> 00:10:47,560 Most fungi don't produce mushrooms, 122 00:10:47,560 --> 00:10:49,320 and even the fungi that do 123 00:10:49,320 --> 00:10:51,800 only produce them for a small moment in a year. 124 00:10:56,680 --> 00:10:59,840 Fungi have long enriched and enhanced life on this planet. 125 00:11:02,280 --> 00:11:05,440 But researchers think we've only described about 5% of all 126 00:11:05,440 --> 00:11:07,320 the fungal species on Earth. 127 00:11:13,120 --> 00:11:18,320 I want to better understand how they've survived for so long 128 00:11:18,320 --> 00:11:20,480 and what lessons they might have for humanity 129 00:11:20,480 --> 00:11:23,680 as we wrestle with our most urgent problems. 130 00:11:27,400 --> 00:11:32,280 Merlin's research has helped reveal an essential relationship 131 00:11:32,280 --> 00:11:34,680 between fungi and plants. 132 00:11:36,760 --> 00:11:39,880 Incredibly, over 90% of plants 133 00:11:39,880 --> 00:11:42,120 rely on fungi to survive. 134 00:11:45,960 --> 00:11:48,280 From the earliest moments of their lives, 135 00:11:48,280 --> 00:11:52,000 plants use chemicals to signal to fungi in the soil... 136 00:11:53,800 --> 00:11:56,160 ..guiding them towards the roots 137 00:11:56,160 --> 00:11:58,240 and even into them. 138 00:12:04,920 --> 00:12:06,800 A single plant can form relationships 139 00:12:06,800 --> 00:12:08,720 with hundreds of different fungi. 140 00:12:14,680 --> 00:12:18,320 By working with fungi, plants can gain greater access 141 00:12:18,320 --> 00:12:20,080 to nutrients for growth. 142 00:12:23,440 --> 00:12:29,120 In return, fungi receive food, like sugars, that plants produce, 143 00:12:29,120 --> 00:12:32,640 extending their reach far above the forest floor. 144 00:12:40,640 --> 00:12:44,360 Under each footstep, hundreds of kilometres of mycelial networks 145 00:12:44,360 --> 00:12:46,720 weave their way through the soil. 146 00:12:56,360 --> 00:13:00,520 More than one tree can connect to a single fungus, 147 00:13:00,520 --> 00:13:02,960 forming shared networks, 148 00:13:02,960 --> 00:13:05,400 sometimes called "the wood-wide web". 149 00:13:12,120 --> 00:13:14,400 Through these networks, 150 00:13:14,400 --> 00:13:17,920 resources can move between plants of different species 151 00:13:17,920 --> 00:13:20,000 throughout the forest. 152 00:13:24,880 --> 00:13:31,240 Older trees with the most connections act as central hubs, 153 00:13:31,240 --> 00:13:35,120 allowing younger plants to take root and thrive. 154 00:13:39,600 --> 00:13:42,760 Fungi can teach us about the symbiotic way of life, 155 00:13:42,760 --> 00:13:45,360 about how all life is lived in relationships 156 00:13:45,360 --> 00:13:46,880 with other organisms. 157 00:13:49,000 --> 00:13:51,680 In this sense, life is collaboration... 158 00:13:54,680 --> 00:13:57,080 ..and collaboration is always a blend 159 00:13:57,080 --> 00:13:59,200 of cooperation and competition. 160 00:14:06,880 --> 00:14:10,840 Fungi are one of the circulatory systems of the planet. 161 00:14:12,280 --> 00:14:16,600 If you were to stretch out all of the mycelium on Earth, 162 00:14:16,600 --> 00:14:21,240 it would span half of the width of the Milky Way galaxy. 163 00:14:34,000 --> 00:14:38,240 But perhaps the most overlooked superpower of fungi 164 00:14:38,240 --> 00:14:42,880 is their ability to recycle life through decomposition. 165 00:14:57,680 --> 00:15:00,360 Fungi are some of the only organisms 166 00:15:00,360 --> 00:15:02,240 capable of breaking down 167 00:15:02,240 --> 00:15:04,520 the complex chemistry of wood. 168 00:15:09,040 --> 00:15:11,720 After penetrating the wood, 169 00:15:11,720 --> 00:15:15,320 fungi deploy a range of digestive chemicals... 170 00:15:18,960 --> 00:15:21,600 ..breaking down plant matter 171 00:15:21,600 --> 00:15:25,120 and releasing the nutrients back into the soil 172 00:15:25,120 --> 00:15:28,160 to be taken up by future generations 173 00:15:28,160 --> 00:15:30,520 of forest life. 174 00:16:00,760 --> 00:16:05,080 You think about the life of the tree as a living tree, standing up, 175 00:16:05,080 --> 00:16:07,400 but then you think about the life of the tree 176 00:16:07,400 --> 00:16:11,040 after the tree has fallen, creating the conditions for other life. 177 00:16:12,600 --> 00:16:17,560 Without fungi, dead wood and other plant matter would pile up and up. 178 00:16:23,440 --> 00:16:26,760 Other fungi specialise in recycling animal life... 179 00:16:29,040 --> 00:16:31,720 ..including this fascinating species. 180 00:16:34,080 --> 00:16:36,280 The ghoul fungus is living in the shadow 181 00:16:36,280 --> 00:16:38,200 of the body that was once there. 182 00:16:41,440 --> 00:16:43,160 Fungi can decompose 183 00:16:43,160 --> 00:16:45,840 but they can also grow mushrooms, 184 00:16:45,840 --> 00:16:48,080 the next stage in the food web. 185 00:16:54,680 --> 00:16:57,480 When these mushrooms are eaten, they provide the nutrients 186 00:16:57,480 --> 00:17:00,040 that other organisms can then use to grow... 187 00:17:06,200 --> 00:17:08,640 ..connecting all life in the forest... 188 00:17:15,480 --> 00:17:17,960 ..from the smallest 189 00:17:17,960 --> 00:17:19,680 to the largest. 190 00:17:26,840 --> 00:17:28,720 So it helps us to think about how the matter 191 00:17:28,720 --> 00:17:31,400 that composes our own bodies will continue its journey 192 00:17:31,400 --> 00:17:33,200 after we die. 193 00:17:44,200 --> 00:17:48,760 Forests exist thanks to the transformational powers of fungi. 194 00:17:55,560 --> 00:18:00,080 But fungi also offer world-changing opportunities for humanity. 195 00:18:03,120 --> 00:18:05,880 In the Yunnan province of China, 196 00:18:05,880 --> 00:18:09,360 new discoveries are showing how fungi 197 00:18:09,360 --> 00:18:13,800 might help address some of our biggest environmental challenges. 198 00:18:17,400 --> 00:18:22,800 These forests are home to over 6,000 species of mushroom, 199 00:18:22,800 --> 00:18:26,960 making Yunnan one of the most diverse fungal ecosystems 200 00:18:26,960 --> 00:18:28,920 on the planet. 201 00:18:30,000 --> 00:18:34,480 Some of the oldest-known fossils of fungi have been found here, 202 00:18:34,480 --> 00:18:38,760 as well as the earliest evidence of mushroom farming, 203 00:18:38,760 --> 00:18:41,000 over 2,000 years ago. 204 00:18:57,240 --> 00:19:03,560 Today, the people of Yunnan forage and farm over 800 edible mushrooms. 205 00:19:06,920 --> 00:19:11,680 Other species have been used in traditional medicine for millennia, 206 00:19:11,680 --> 00:19:16,840 with health benefits modern medicine is only now beginning to explore. 207 00:19:20,680 --> 00:19:26,320 With such diversity, it makes sense that Yunnan is at the forefront 208 00:19:26,320 --> 00:19:28,960 of fungal research, 209 00:19:28,960 --> 00:19:32,480 led by biologists like Peter Mortimer 210 00:19:32,480 --> 00:19:36,160 and his team from the Kunming Institute of Botany. 211 00:19:38,240 --> 00:19:40,600 Yunnan is a wonderland for fungi. 212 00:19:41,680 --> 00:19:45,080 It's really muddy, it's rainy, there's leeches everywhere, 213 00:19:45,080 --> 00:19:46,640 the mosquitoes are biting you, 214 00:19:46,640 --> 00:19:49,200 but it is so much fun looking for fungi, 215 00:19:49,200 --> 00:19:51,800 these hardships don't really matter. 216 00:19:53,920 --> 00:19:55,800 To date, we've been part of 217 00:19:55,800 --> 00:19:59,400 describing more than 1,000 new species of fungi. 218 00:20:02,120 --> 00:20:05,520 Recently, Peter and his team made a discovery 219 00:20:05,520 --> 00:20:08,640 that might help us deal with plastic waste. 220 00:20:10,880 --> 00:20:15,360 There's about 400 million tonnes of plastic produced annually. 221 00:20:16,480 --> 00:20:18,440 Much of it enters natural ecosystems, 222 00:20:18,440 --> 00:20:21,200 and chemicals inside the plastics are leaching out 223 00:20:21,200 --> 00:20:23,040 into soil systems and water bodies. 224 00:20:24,120 --> 00:20:25,760 So, plastic is long-lived, 225 00:20:25,760 --> 00:20:27,600 it's absolutely everywhere, 226 00:20:27,600 --> 00:20:29,200 and it really is disastrous. 227 00:20:30,960 --> 00:20:33,240 We were collecting fungi in the forest 228 00:20:33,240 --> 00:20:36,360 and we came across a piece of plastic, 229 00:20:36,360 --> 00:20:38,520 and it was full of fungus. 230 00:20:38,520 --> 00:20:41,400 So we seal it up and we bring it back to the laboratory. 231 00:20:45,440 --> 00:20:49,080 Lo and behold, we got a whole range of fungi. 232 00:20:49,080 --> 00:20:51,680 Four of those are new species to science. 233 00:20:51,680 --> 00:20:55,120 And even better, it turns out those four species are able 234 00:20:55,120 --> 00:20:56,920 to break down plastic. 235 00:20:58,720 --> 00:21:01,880 So, under this microscope in the petri dish, we can see 236 00:21:01,880 --> 00:21:04,440 how the mycelium from the fungi 237 00:21:04,440 --> 00:21:07,200 is penetrating this plastic sheet, 238 00:21:07,200 --> 00:21:09,080 breaking it apart, 239 00:21:09,080 --> 00:21:11,440 and then actively digesting it. 240 00:21:16,920 --> 00:21:19,520 It just shows how rapidly fungi adapt 241 00:21:19,520 --> 00:21:22,280 in a change to the environment. 242 00:21:22,280 --> 00:21:26,480 Plastic has only come into existence in the last, say, 100 years, 243 00:21:26,480 --> 00:21:29,520 yet fungi have the chemical arsenal 244 00:21:29,520 --> 00:21:31,680 to digest a range of plastics. 245 00:21:33,080 --> 00:21:36,560 If we can just find that one species that can be very efficient 246 00:21:36,560 --> 00:21:39,360 at breaking down the plastic, we can start doing it at scales 247 00:21:39,360 --> 00:21:42,400 where real-world problems start getting addressed. 248 00:21:45,880 --> 00:21:50,200 Other fungi studied here have produced therapeutics used 249 00:21:50,200 --> 00:21:53,720 in organ transplants, as well as treatments 250 00:21:53,720 --> 00:21:56,160 for cancer and epilepsy. 251 00:21:59,720 --> 00:22:03,960 The most famous fungal medicine, penicillin, has saved 252 00:22:03,960 --> 00:22:07,800 billions of lives by fighting bacterial infections. 253 00:22:14,000 --> 00:22:16,040 Under the microscope, 254 00:22:16,040 --> 00:22:19,680 you can see penicillin holding back bacterial growth. 255 00:22:29,960 --> 00:22:32,680 All of this lies within the fungi around us. 256 00:22:32,680 --> 00:22:34,560 Until we find and discover those fungi, 257 00:22:34,560 --> 00:22:38,240 we're never going to know what that potential benefit could have been. 258 00:22:40,840 --> 00:22:44,440 But breaking down pollutants and healing people 259 00:22:44,440 --> 00:22:47,760 aren't the only benefits that fungi offer us. 260 00:22:52,160 --> 00:22:54,000 In the United States, 261 00:22:54,000 --> 00:22:57,160 a revolutionary industry is emerging... 262 00:22:59,080 --> 00:23:04,200 ..driven by the idea that not only can fungi break things down, 263 00:23:04,200 --> 00:23:06,520 they can also build them up. 264 00:23:08,280 --> 00:23:12,000 One company at the forefront is Ecovative Design 265 00:23:12,000 --> 00:23:16,840 in upstate New York, led by CEO Eben Bayer. 266 00:23:18,320 --> 00:23:21,160 We want to use mycelium materials to solve problems 267 00:23:21,160 --> 00:23:23,800 that are really important. 268 00:23:23,800 --> 00:23:25,920 So, for us right now, that's around animal agriculture 269 00:23:25,920 --> 00:23:28,680 and single-use plastics, which are two of, like, the biggest 270 00:23:28,680 --> 00:23:32,320 material-related pressures on the ecosystem. 271 00:23:32,320 --> 00:23:34,680 Researchers here have discovered 272 00:23:34,680 --> 00:23:37,360 how to grow materials using mycelium... 273 00:23:39,600 --> 00:23:42,440 ..replacing plastic products with alternatives 274 00:23:42,440 --> 00:23:45,200 which are fully recyclable. 275 00:23:45,200 --> 00:23:47,520 The first step is we get agricultural by-products - 276 00:23:47,520 --> 00:23:49,360 things like wood chips. 277 00:23:49,360 --> 00:23:52,480 That's where we add the mycelial cells. 278 00:23:52,480 --> 00:23:54,800 Over the next few days, they go crazy, 279 00:23:54,800 --> 00:23:57,440 they grow all around the wood chips. 280 00:23:58,640 --> 00:23:59,880 When you're done growing it, 281 00:23:59,880 --> 00:24:02,240 you always end up with a product that's completely compatible 282 00:24:02,240 --> 00:24:04,400 with the planet. 283 00:24:04,400 --> 00:24:06,120 You get this thing that looks like Styrofoam, 284 00:24:06,120 --> 00:24:07,960 but you can actually compost in your garden. 285 00:24:07,960 --> 00:24:10,120 You can literally just throw this anywhere in the environment. 286 00:24:10,120 --> 00:24:12,760 And it would actually serve as a nutrient for planet Earth, 287 00:24:12,760 --> 00:24:14,600 not a pollutant. 288 00:24:14,600 --> 00:24:18,200 Mycelium materials have been used to grow everything 289 00:24:18,200 --> 00:24:21,040 from packaging to surfboards. 290 00:24:21,040 --> 00:24:24,680 They can even replace fabrics, like leather. 291 00:24:27,080 --> 00:24:31,400 Researchers like senior scientist Molly Boutin are working 292 00:24:31,400 --> 00:24:34,240 towards even more surprising materials. 293 00:24:35,760 --> 00:24:38,880 We really take our inspiration from nature. 294 00:24:38,880 --> 00:24:43,360 So when we go out into the woods and collect samples... 295 00:24:44,760 --> 00:24:48,080 If you look at fungi out in the wild, 296 00:24:48,080 --> 00:24:50,360 they might be different colours... 297 00:24:52,320 --> 00:24:55,440 ..they form different structures. 298 00:24:55,440 --> 00:24:59,960 The diversity of fungi is very important because it means 299 00:24:59,960 --> 00:25:03,680 that there are such a wide variety of materials that we can make. 300 00:25:07,920 --> 00:25:10,360 When you collect these different samples and bring them back 301 00:25:10,360 --> 00:25:13,600 to the lab, you will see that they grow in different ways. 302 00:25:15,720 --> 00:25:19,080 As you do research, you're seeing things and you're learning things 303 00:25:19,080 --> 00:25:21,320 that no-one's ever seen before. 304 00:25:32,360 --> 00:25:35,360 Mycelial materials touch so many different industries, 305 00:25:35,360 --> 00:25:38,360 like, 1,001 things you can do. 306 00:25:38,360 --> 00:25:41,760 Medical applications is definitely a passion of mine. 307 00:25:41,760 --> 00:25:45,680 Growing things like organs with mycelium sounds way far out, 308 00:25:45,680 --> 00:25:48,800 but my long-term dream would be able to actually grow organs, or at least 309 00:25:48,800 --> 00:25:51,840 the scaffolding for organs, using mycelium. 310 00:25:54,720 --> 00:25:59,320 If materials can be reimagined in such a radical way, 311 00:25:59,320 --> 00:26:04,400 what other opportunities might the fungal kingdom hold for humanity? 312 00:26:19,800 --> 00:26:21,800 Back in the Tarkine, 313 00:26:21,800 --> 00:26:25,440 fungi are shaping their environment in ways that have 314 00:26:25,440 --> 00:26:27,640 long been hidden from view. 315 00:26:41,840 --> 00:26:47,880 A single mushroom can produce 30,000 microscopic spores each second. 316 00:26:53,240 --> 00:26:57,080 As water evaporates from the underside of the mushroom, 317 00:26:57,080 --> 00:27:01,160 small wind currents lift the spores into the air. 318 00:27:07,320 --> 00:27:10,400 Fungal spores are the largest source 319 00:27:10,400 --> 00:27:14,520 of airborne living particles on Earth, equal to the weight 320 00:27:14,520 --> 00:27:18,160 of half a million blue whales each year. 321 00:27:31,080 --> 00:27:33,200 As the spores rise, 322 00:27:33,200 --> 00:27:35,640 they attract water vapour... 323 00:27:37,240 --> 00:27:39,240 THUNDER RUMBLES 324 00:27:39,240 --> 00:27:42,600 ..eventually forming raindrops by the billions. 325 00:27:42,600 --> 00:27:46,640 THUNDER CRASHES 326 00:27:53,480 --> 00:27:56,800 At least 16,000 species of mushroom 327 00:27:56,800 --> 00:27:59,120 release spores this way, 328 00:27:59,120 --> 00:28:01,400 helping to stimulate rainfall 329 00:28:01,400 --> 00:28:03,840 in forests all around the world. 330 00:28:05,520 --> 00:28:07,560 It's a win for fungi. 331 00:28:07,560 --> 00:28:12,200 Not only do they succeed in spreading far and wide, 332 00:28:12,200 --> 00:28:16,440 they also nurture the moist environments necessary 333 00:28:16,440 --> 00:28:18,160 for fungal life. 334 00:28:19,680 --> 00:28:23,640 THUNDER RUMBLES 335 00:28:34,760 --> 00:28:37,560 MERLIN: The forest feels different at night. 336 00:28:37,560 --> 00:28:41,000 It feels like it's inhabited in a different way. 337 00:28:43,840 --> 00:28:48,040 The whole forest is the outgrowth of fungal relationships. 338 00:28:52,240 --> 00:28:56,720 Everywhere you look, there are stories unfolding around fungi. 339 00:29:02,960 --> 00:29:06,280 Long-nosed potoroos here in the Tarkine 340 00:29:06,280 --> 00:29:10,240 have adapted to eat over 60 species of fungi. 341 00:29:15,120 --> 00:29:19,280 Potoroos rely on smell to find the fungi that they need to survive. 342 00:29:23,280 --> 00:29:26,080 Underground fungi produce powerful odours that can 343 00:29:26,080 --> 00:29:29,760 travel through layers of damp soil out into the air. 344 00:29:33,360 --> 00:29:37,920 By producing aromas to attract animals, fungi which live 345 00:29:37,920 --> 00:29:41,960 out of sight can make themselves known, 346 00:29:41,960 --> 00:29:45,400 ensuring their spores are spread. 347 00:29:54,280 --> 00:29:59,320 Some fungi have figured out another way to attract attention at night. 348 00:30:03,040 --> 00:30:05,520 This is the ghost fungus. 349 00:30:06,880 --> 00:30:10,400 It's one of around 90 species of mushroom 350 00:30:10,400 --> 00:30:12,640 known to glow in the dark. 351 00:30:16,040 --> 00:30:19,040 Bioluminescence is another example 352 00:30:19,040 --> 00:30:22,120 of the chemical wizardry of fungi. 353 00:30:24,920 --> 00:30:29,920 Oxygen reacts with chemicals made by the mushroom, producing light. 354 00:30:42,600 --> 00:30:47,520 It's really exciting to see these bioluminescent fungi glowing, 355 00:30:47,520 --> 00:30:50,120 and when your eyes adjust to the dark, they become 356 00:30:50,120 --> 00:30:51,840 more striking and vivid. 357 00:30:55,200 --> 00:30:58,920 Some species glow to attract insects, 358 00:30:58,920 --> 00:31:02,600 helping the fungi by spreading their spores. 359 00:31:09,400 --> 00:31:11,880 Why other species glow 360 00:31:11,880 --> 00:31:13,640 remains a mystery. 361 00:31:16,400 --> 00:31:21,040 Mushrooms have been illuminating these forests for millions of years. 362 00:31:23,560 --> 00:31:26,040 But that light may soon be fading. 363 00:31:38,280 --> 00:31:42,000 Fungi may be some of nature's greatest survivors, 364 00:31:42,000 --> 00:31:46,080 but never before have they faced a threat like us. 365 00:31:58,840 --> 00:32:00,840 Forests like the Tarkine, 366 00:32:00,840 --> 00:32:03,120 where fungi are most diverse, 367 00:32:03,120 --> 00:32:09,440 are being cleared at the rate of one football field every two minutes. 368 00:32:13,880 --> 00:32:18,000 Of the old-growth forest that once existed around the world, 369 00:32:18,000 --> 00:32:20,720 only one fifth remains. 370 00:32:24,400 --> 00:32:29,200 Some trees in the Tarkine can live for over 2,000 years. 371 00:32:33,680 --> 00:32:38,120 Ripping out these ancient trees disrupts the wood-wide web. 372 00:32:42,160 --> 00:32:46,320 Deforestation interrupts other crucial benefits 373 00:32:46,320 --> 00:32:48,680 fungi provide the world. 374 00:32:48,680 --> 00:32:53,120 Each year, mycelium draws down more than five billion tonnes 375 00:32:53,120 --> 00:32:55,880 of carbon from the atmosphere, which would otherwise 376 00:32:55,880 --> 00:32:57,880 drive climate change. 377 00:33:03,400 --> 00:33:07,320 When I'm in these burnt, clear-cut areas, 378 00:33:07,320 --> 00:33:10,280 I'm reminded of the Library of Alexandria, 379 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. 382 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. 384 00:33:31,040 --> 00:33:33,800 What aspects of this library might be crucial for 385 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 387 00:34:05,760 --> 00:34:09,520 of the fungal tree of life to extinction. 388 00:34:13,160 --> 00:34:16,800 But if fungi have taught us anything, 389 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. 392 00:34:52,120 --> 00:34:56,000 Merlin and other scientists are working together to 393 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, 396 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... 401 00:35:49,120 --> 00:35:52,400 ..it's a journey we're just beginning. 32452

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