The dailysciencedigest’s Podcast
Fungal superhighway and the hidden fungal world beneath our feet revealed Underground fungi network and mycorrhizal networks mapped across 110 quadrillion kilometers of Earth’s soils Discover how this forest underground network—the wood wide web—moves carbon, water, and nutrients while shaping climate and ecosystems What You'll Learn: * How mycorrhizal networks form a global fungal superhighway connecting roots, soils, and entire ecosystems * Why a single teaspoon of healthy soil can hold up to 100 meters of 5 µm-wide fungal hyphae—and what that means for soil health * How a 110 quadrillion kilometer underground fungi network compares to 724 astronomical units and a Solar System-spanning scale * The role of soil fungi in moving an estimated 4 billion tons of carbon dioxide into soils each year * How fungi and climate change are linked through carbon storage in soil and underground nutrient cycling * Why some estimates suggest fungal networks may channel 13 gigatons of water to plants annually—and why that number still needs verification * How the newly mapped hidden fungal world could transform conservation, reforestation, and regenerative agriculture strategies * Practical ways scientists and land stewards might protect and restore the wood wide web to build climate resilience
100 episodios
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