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  • Hey smart people, Joe here.

  • Beneath your feet there is a secret network.

  • This network trades resources, transmits information, and can even go to war.

  • I know what you're thinking, and no, this isn't the world wide web.

  • It's something much older.

  • 450 million years older.

  • And it makes life on Earth as we know it possible.

  • This is the wood wide web.

  • The most important social network on Earth.

  • [MUSIC]

  • Walk into a forest and just listen.

  • (forest noises)

  • You can't hear it, but the forest is communicating.

  • If you've never noticed this before it's because all of this is happening below your

  • feet.

  • The wood wide web is a network created by fungi.

  • They're called mycorrhizal fungi and these fungi live in and around the roots of trees

  • and other plants.

  • Fungi are a huge domain on the tree of life, and as you've probably noticed by now, nobody

  • knows how you're supposed to actually say it.

  • I'm going withfun guybecause that's what I am.

  • Fungi include molds, mushrooms and yeasts, and as a whole they are essential to making

  • all of Earth's organic garbage and dead stuff decompose and disappear.

  • While some fungi do resemble plants, they are definitely not plants.

  • They're technically more closely related to animalsbut really fungi are a form

  • of life like no other.

  • Fungi don't fossilize well so it's hard to know exactly when they first appeared in

  • the evolutionary scene, but some fossil records show mycorrhizal fungi have been living in

  • this partnership since the first land plants appeared in the Paleozoic, around 400 million

  • years ago.

  • These underground fungi are essential to plant survival.

  • They also extend hair-like filaments called hyphae into the soil which pump water even

  • more efficiently than the tree's own roots.

  • Just like we need our vitamins and minerals to grow, so do trees.

  • Plants from rose bushes to towering redwoods need these micronutrients to survive!

  • And mycorrhizal fungi are efficient little miners.

  • They use acid to bore holes into rocks and fish out nitrogen and phosphorous.

  • In exchange for all this subterranean service, a tree provides the mycorrhizal fungi with

  • sugar, created through photosynthesis.

  • Trees release between 20-80% of the glucose they create to their fungal partners.

  • And older trees, the grandpop-lars and grandma-ples, have more complex fungal interconnections

  • than younger trees.

  • But these mycorrhizal fungi do more than trade minerals, water and sugar with their host

  • tree.

  • They also form massive branching networks of the fungal threads, called mycelium, that

  • can extend thousands of acres, connecting entire forests.

  • If you dig into the forest dirt, you may see these thousands of tiny white tubes if you

  • look closely.

  • In a single pinch of dirt these hyphae, when lined up, can extend 11 km!

  • And these networks act as fungal freeways for shipping chemical currencies.

  • The fungi can act like a seasonal bank account for trees, giving loans of sugar if the trees

  • need an extra boost.

  • Scientists have found that if a tree is dying, it will release its extra glucose into the

  • wood wide web where it can delivered to younger nearby trees, even trees of a different species.

  • Trees can also use the network to send out warning signals.

  • If insects bite into one tree, it can send a chemical signal through the wood wide web,

  • and when trees deeper in the forest receive this insect alert message, they produce bitter

  • compounds that make their leaves less tasty to those same insects.

  • "The Ents are going to war!"

  • Some trees, like black walnuts, even use the network to spread chemical attacks, sabotaging

  • other trees that try to grow too close.

  • Across the globe, there are two main types of these mycorrhizal fungi that make up the

  • wood wide web.

  • Trees in cooler climates tend to host one type, which create huge interconnected networks

  • that cover massive areas.

  • But warmer, tropical forests tend to be dominated by a different type, which create smaller,

  • more localized networks.

  • It's like the difference between big, national chain stores and your local farmers' market.

  • The balance between these two types of wood wide webs is important to Earth's climate.

  • In general, the massive interconnected forest fungal webs tend to lock up carbon in the

  • soil as they decompose stuff.

  • And the more local network fungi tend to release more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.

  • As global temperatures warm up, forests are changing, and the balance of these two types

  • of fungal networks is changing too.

  • More of the planet covered with tropical forests means those large, carbon-storing fungal networks

  • will be replaced by the more localized fungal networks which release carbon into the air,

  • which will just accelerate climate change, which, even though plants eat CO2, is still

  • not good.

  • So next time you're walking through a forest, take a moment to think about the very small

  • but also very large network that exists under your feet.

  • Just because you can't log on to the wood wide web, doesn't mean you aren't connected.

  • It's time we think of forests as more than trees.

  • Stay curious.

Hey smart people, Joe here.

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B1 中級

木は話すのか? (Do Trees Talk?)

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    Taka に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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