Mushrooms could be natural solution to global warming problem
This plant-fungus relationship has been known for some time, but new research published in Current Biology provides conclusive and powerful data for the potential role of mycorrhizal fungi in removing significant amounts of CO2 from the atmosphere.
Fungi transfer a third of emissions to soil
A research fellow on plant-soil-microbe interactions at the University of Cape Town, Dr. In the study led by Heidi Hawkins, it is estimated that plants take 13.12 gigatons of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) from the atmosphere each year and give it to mycorrhizal fungi in the soil. Such symbiotic fungi help to safely store 36 percent of annual fossil fuel emissions in the soil. Hawkins says the research provides new “awareness” of the potential role these fungi play in controlling rising CO2 levels.
While more research is needed to examine the role of mycorrhizal fungi in the CO2 cycle, scientists are already suggesting some practical actions, such as protecting areas known to have high carbon dispersal in soils thanks to these “specific mycorrhizal associations.” This means we need to protect forests, just as we have for some time done in the most climate sensitive parts of the world.