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Largest Living Organism Is A Fungus

Makarand writes "A single enormous underground fungus found growing in a Canadian forest and estimated to between 2000 and 8500 years old could easily be the largest known living organism on earth. This fungus is believed to have begun its life as a microscopic spore and then grown to cover an area of around an area of 9.65 square kilometers. That it is a single organism was confirmed by collecting samples of the fungus from different parts of the forest and observing their reactions as they were grown together on Petri dishes. Fungal growths have the ability to distinguish their own growths from other fungal individuals."

4 of 66 comments (clear)

  1. Hah by orangesquid · · Score: 2, Informative

    Well of course Windows XP is a fungus, what did you *think* it was? ;)

    But anyway, here's another story, seemingly on the same growth:
    Armillaria in Oregon
    Here's some information about this type of fungus:
    Armillaria tree growth

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    --TheOrangeSquid Is it any wonder things seem so awry? We swim in a sea of confusion and don't have to think to survive
  2. isn't this an american fungus / forest? by ndevice · · Score: 2, Informative

    it could be just me, but the way I read the article was that the fungus was discovered in an OREGON forest, and the data was collected by the USDA. Does anyone want to tell me where there's an Oregon in Canada?

    Of course, the poster might not have read the article carefully and just sourced it as Ottawa, Ontario, taken from the first line.

  3. Re:Um? by PurpleFloyd · · Score: 4, Informative
    No, but separate cells in a mushroom or slime mold are. The important thing is that each cell can communicate with its neighbors, and has some role to play in a larger system. Also, it would have to communicate intracellularly, or it could never reproduce. That's the Central Dogma of molecular biology: DNA->RNA->proteins. Any organism which lacked intracellular communication would die almost immediately.

    Even assuming you meant "intercellular," however, the story mentioned that the cells responded differently towards each other than they did towards "outsiders." If this is the case, then the cells must have some form of communication with the outside world, and with each other. Ergo, it's a single organism, since the cells communicate. Whether it's a fungus doesn't matter; whether it has cells that communicate with each other does.

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    That's it. I'm no longer part of Team Sanity.
  4. It used to be a fungus, now it's a bigger fungus by DeadSea · · Score: 3, Informative
    I recall having read about the discovery of a huge fungus several year ago. That one must have been a different organism as the page I linked to says its in Oregon. Interestingly, this page gives credit for the largest fungus found in 1992 in Washington state.

    At the time of the original large fungus discoveries, I recall that the largest living organism was considered to be a tree. Actually, grove of aspen trees that all shared the same roots.

    When the aspen trees were discovered, they replaced some giant sequoia which had long been considered both the largest and fastest growing organism on earth.