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Subterranean fungi networks more than 100 quadrillion km in length

theguardian.com

115 points by tosh 6 days ago · 32 comments

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TrackerFF 5 hours ago

Say you have a filament that's 1 µm in diameter, and 1 meter long. You want to fill up a 1m^3 (1m W x 1m H x 1m L) space with these, how many of these can you place in such a space? Over a trillion! And thus, the combined km length of these will also be over a billion km. At such small scales things can become very long when summed up.

  • Quarrel 19 minutes ago

    Everytime I see people talking about the length of their coastlines ...

    Look at how long this edge of my fractal is, Ma!

mkl 8 hours ago

100×10^12 km is about 10.6 light years. There are about 16 other stars closer to the sun than that. It's a bit like a human body containing blood vessels with total length greater than twice the Earth's circumference.

  • uberex 4 hours ago

    How many light years is the English coastline?

  • N_Lens 6 hours ago

    Reality appears to be fractal.

  • p1esk 8 hours ago

    100×10^15 km

    • mkl 4 hours ago

      Doh, you're right, it's way bigger. I was in too much of a rush.

  • mc32 3 hours ago

    I wonder if these measurements were done in similar fashion to how they measured kudzu coverage in the US. For the longest time it was assumed that one of the initial projections was correct; however, under closer examination that estimate was off by a factor of 30. Kudzu wasn’t enveloping the South. It did like the byways though.

  • themafia 5 hours ago

    So it could be sentient but it's pace of thinking might be absolutely glacial.

  • perarneng 7 hours ago

    Imagine if a 3year old has only one single blood vessel: The single blood vessel grows by approximately 88 kilometers per day since conception.

    Here is the quick calculation using that timeline:

    •Total Days: ~1,365 days (270 days in the womb + 1,095 days of life up to age 3).

    •Total Length: ~120,000 kilometers.

    That breaks down to an astonishing 3.7 kilometers of growth every single hour.

    Typical adult walking speed: ~5 km/h . Next time you are walking then imagine the tiny thin blood vessel growing behind you almost at the same speed you are walking. If you slow down and stop it will catch up to you.

animalfarm an hour ago

Highly recommended: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/52668915-entangled-life

  • randlet an hour ago

    Great book. I really enjoyed the audiobook version which is narrated by the author.

N_Lens 6 hours ago

I believe Planet will talk to us if we are willing to listen. These fungal stalks behave as multistate relays: taken together, the neural net connectivity must be staggering. Can a planet be said to have achieved sentience?

- Lady Deirdre Skye, Planet Dreams, Alpha Centauri

kolinko 3 hours ago

So around the length of the coastline of UK.

jakzurr an hour ago

The article is still pretty cool, even though the discussion brings up some issues with their arithmetic.

xvxvx an hour ago

I read to the part where they used machine learning to get the results and lost all faith in this being accurate at all.

reliablereason 5 hours ago

If you have a number that is 1000^90000000 that number is larger than the number of atoms in the observable universe.

  • xattt 4 hours ago

    Length is ultimately an arbitrary concept, and a measurement like thay can be made even more impressive by going down to some other unit like Angstroms.

contingencies 6 hours ago

Interesting how deeply east coast Australia is colored. I live in Sydney, a city of 5.6 million humans, and yet my yard apparently has at least the following fungi I can identify to species level: Aseroe rubra (alien thing with tendrils), Astraeus hygrometricus, Cladia aggregata, Coprinellus disseminatus, Coprinellus micaceus, Cruentomycena viscidocruenta, Flavoparmelia caperata, Heterodea muelleri, Hypholoma fasciculare, Leratiomyces ceres, Mycena tenerrima, Myriostoma australianum, Omphalotus nidiformis (glows in the dark), Panellus luxfilamentus, Satyrus rubicundus (looks like a red penis), Scleroderma cepa, Scleroderma citrinum, Trametes coccinea, Trametes versicolor, Usnea hirta.

  • birdfood 5 hours ago

    I live on the Gold Coast and I have seen in my yard Aseroe rubra, glow in the dark mushrooms (not for a while now) and many others. Just this weekend I found one that looks a bit like a king oyster. Where did you get your list? I was looking for a visual guide to local fungi

metalman 2 hours ago

there was other work done on nemetodes, that are all over the planet, in glaciers, deap ocean, in rock far underground, etc, where someone did a representation of the earth, but with everything but the nemetodes removed, my speculation is that a large part of nemetode and mycylium networks, overlap.

waterTanuki 7 hours ago

The map looks off. No way the American Southwest has 3 meters per cm cubed of fungal density in such an arid region. Plenty of desert.

WalterGR 8 hours ago

> First ever global mapping of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi shows scale of hyphal systems that sustain plant life

Related and recent: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48209905 - "Mycorrhizal Fungi, Nature's Key to Plant Survival and Success" (pacifichorticulture.org)

153 points | 26 days ago | 50 comments

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