Science

A Nod to Carnivorous Mushrooms

Cat Baklarz
Sep 21, 2022
Photo by Hans Veth on Unsplash

Last week’s research on carnivorous plants led to another discovery: carnivorous mushrooms.

Living mushrooms eat dead people.

But mushrooms also use threadlike hyphae that make up the mycelium of a fungus. Those strings decompose decaying matter and trap microscopic organisms that might otherwise eat the luscious mushrooms above.

“When a browsing nematode…puts its head into this miniature noose, pressure sensors in the ring cells [of the hyphae] detect it and set in motion the springing of the trap.”¹

What, then, is stopping us from writing more about man-eating mushrooms?

[1] Nissan, Ephraim. “Deadly Flowers and Lethal Plants. A Theme in Folklore, Fiction and Metaphoric Imagery.” Fabula, vol. 50, no. 3–4, 2009, pp. 293–311, https://doi.org/10.1515/FABL.2009.024.

Cat Baklarz

|Los Angeles| Environmentalist, Writer, Historian of the Weird.