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Fungi Help Trees Share Carbon

(Wikimedia Commons)
(Wikimedia Commons)

Once you know something about forests, it's easy to think of trees as competitive: they have to battle it out with each other for space, sunlight, water and nutrients. But researchers are finding that there's a lot more sharing going on than they previously thought.

One thing that all trees need is carbon, which they take up from the atmosphere during photosynthesis. But instead of keeping it all to themselves, scientists' new research suggests that trees may exchange carbon with their neighbors, even if they're of a different species, via a network of underground fungi.

Using a construction crane and thin tubes, researchers pumped carbon dioxide over the canopies of spruce trees in a Swiss forest. The gas was labeled with a special isotope that allowed scientists to track it as it traveled down to the trees' roots and into the soil.

When the researchers tested the roots of trees in the area, they found the labeled carbon was not only in the spruce trees that took up the carbon, but also in the roots of neighboring trees, which included beech, larch, and pine.

The only way the neighboring trees could get labeled carbon, scientists say, is through a network of underground fungi that form symbiotic relationships with the trees' roots. It's an important role to play: the carbon exchanged by trees could be crucial for helping forests survive damaging events such as droughts.

Research such as this is helping us redefine our understanding of the importance of fungi to forests, and expanding our idea of forests beyond...and below...just trees.

Once you know something about forests, it's easy to think of trees as competitive: they have to battle it out with each other for space, sunlight, water and nutrients. But researchers are finding that there's a lot more sharing going on than they previously thought.

            One thing that all trees need is carbon, which they take up from the atmosphere during photosynthesis. But instead of keeping it all to themselves, scientists' new research suggests that trees may exchange carbon with their neighbors, even if they're of a different species, via a network of underground fungi.

            Using a construction crane and thin tubes, researchers pumped carbon dioxide over the canopies of spruce trees in a Swiss forest. The gas was labeled with a special isotope that allowed scientists to track it as it traveled down to the trees' roots and into the soil.

            When the researchers tested the roots of trees in the area, they found the labeled carbon was not only in the spruce trees that took up the carbon, but also in the roots of neighboring trees, which included beech, larch, and pine.

            The only way the neighboring trees could get labeled carbon, scientists say, is through a network of underground fungi that form symbiotic relationships with the trees' roots. It's an important role to play: the carbon exchanged by trees could be crucial for helping forests survive damaging events such as droughts.

            Research such as this is helping us redefine our understanding of the importance of fungi to forests, and expanding our idea of forests beyond...and below...just trees.

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Walker Rhea has a B.A. in Comparative Literature from Indiana University. In addition to reading and writing about science, he enjoys performing live comedy in Bloomington, IN and studying dead languages.