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Earth Science

Can These Fungus-Studying Scientists Make the Planet More Resilient to Climate Change? (msn.com) 49

A team of scientists drove hundreds of miles through the steppes of Kazakhstan in search of what may be one of the largest and most diverse fungi ecosystems on Earth.

The Washington Post believes their efforts "could help make the planet more resilient to climate change." When these underground fungi come together, they form sophisticated systems known as "mycorrhizal networks...." Mycorrhizal fungi often form mutually beneficial relationships with plants. They trade essential nutrients such as phosphorus and nitrogen in exchange for carbon, and act as an extended root system, allowing plants to access water they can't reach. These networks may also prove to be invaluable for transporting carbon underground, a study published in June found. About 13 gigatons of carbon fixed by vegetation — equivalent to about one-third of all carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuels in one year — flows through underground fungi, according to an analysis of nearly 200 data sets.

In the steppe, these plant-fungal benefits may be short-lived, however. While deserts are a natural part of Kazakhstan's ecosystem, more than half of the country's vegetation and drylands is at risk of becoming desert as well. The main drivers are large-scale intensive agriculture and increasingly warm and dry temperatures brought by climate change.... Knowing what species of fungi live here is key to understanding how to protect them, said Bethan Manley, project officer at the Society for the Protection of Underground Networks who was on the expedition. It will help determine "where we might be able to have the most effective measures of not poisoning them with fungicides or not having harmful farming practices," she said.

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Can These Fungus-Studying Scientists Make the Planet More Resilient to Climate Change?

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  • Sure... (Score:3, Funny)

    by Black Parrot ( 19622 ) on Monday October 09, 2023 @02:57AM (#63911351)

    Partake enough of that "fungus" and they're bound to have some novel insights.

  • by Errol backfiring ( 1280012 ) on Monday October 09, 2023 @03:33AM (#63911377) Journal
    Maybe, but not enough to counter the still increasing pollution.
  • by VeryFluffyBunny ( 5037285 ) on Monday October 09, 2023 @03:43AM (#63911385)
    ...do everything they can to eradicate fungi. Industrial farming is also incredibly energy & resource intensive & produces massive amounts of CO2, & that's not even counting animal agriculture & methane emissions. If we can get enough farms to switch to more ecologically sustainable methods, that could go a long way to ameliorating a lot of issues & make a large contribution to our continued survival.
    • Yes, but this is not the question asked. Let me rephrase: is there a magic bullet that can make us think we can continue business as usual, and avoid making any real change? And if there is no such magic bullet, can we pretend there is ?

      • by Kelxin ( 3417093 ) on Monday October 09, 2023 @06:06AM (#63911487)
        As far as pretending like there is, over half the planet is already doing that without any issues. As far as a solution, I believe that we need to break away from metropolis cities and have more self sustaining communal based food supplies. If we actually spread out and used the land more efficiently then we could remove a large amount of spoilage, related transportation costs (not only the financial costs but the environmental costs also), etc. All it's going to take is one major communication / energy catastrophy to drive one or more of the large cities into chaos. Imagine a solar flare taking out every satellite and electrical device over one side of the planet. How would large cities manage the necessities that are trucked / flown in every single day. Cities have become more like cruise ships than what they once were.
        • A lot of international trade was set up & encouraged to prevent wars, i.e. it's harder to wage war against trading partners. You know, a kind of diplomatic deterrent against aggression & belligerence. The downside is that we've ended up needlessly transporting goods all over the world, which yes, is very inefficient. I remember reading an interview with a lorry driver whose job it was to transport British bottled water to Ireland & Irish bottled water to Britain. It may well be a good idea to do
        • As far as a solution, I believe that we need to break away from metropolis cities

          As far as I can tell, all of the detailed analyses show the exact opposite: Humans have worse ecological impact when you spread them out over more land, compared to the same number of humans in a smaller area.

          and have more self sustaining communal based food supplies.

          As far as I can tell, all of the detailed analyses show the exact opposite: the lesser ecological impact comes when farming is done on the land that is most optimal for farming, not in whatever community the humans happen to live in. Subsistence farming on marginal land turns out to be bad for the envi

    • by Rei ( 128717 ) on Monday October 09, 2023 @06:00AM (#63911477) Homepage

      Industrial farming methods do everything they can to eradicate fungi.

      They do not (source: I'm in hort sci).

      First, ag is not the same as it was 70, 50, or even 30 years ago. And even at the most ignorant times there was no effort to "try to kill all fungi". We've known about mycorrhiza and the role that they play for a century. Fungicides are used when the net benefit to yield outweighs the net cost (like any other product). It's not a secret that overuse of fungicide can be harmful to plants. But you know what's also harmful to you harvesting anything? Say, having all your rice infected with blast fungus. Farmers choose the approach that maximizes yields and minimizes cost.

      If you want legitimate criticisms - and again, we're talking mainly about the past here - you need to look at short-term vision and not looking at long-term consequences; things that yield the best yield in the short-term are not always good for the long term. For example, soil carbon wasn't looked at as a nutrient (because technically it isn't), and so was largely ignored (I must stress that this is no longer the case) - the focus was just on replacing the NPK taken out with the harvest with fresh NPK. But soil carbon slowly erodes and oxidizes. Plants can grow just fine without soil carbon - indeed, they grow just fine in sterile environments, that's what hydroponics is, and they can flourish in it - but it reduces resilience, as soil carbon stores water, nutrients, nurtures an ecosystem that helps collect these things (though it's also a double-edged sword, as soil life can also nurture pathogens), and tends to support a good pore structure. But even there, we have to talk about balances. Because people don't, say, till for the fun of it.

      Industrial farming is also incredibly energy & resource intensive & produces massive amounts of CO2

      Per unit production, "industrial farming" is far more environmentally friendly than more primitive techniques. Tell me, if you want to go back to techniques that produced a tenth as much or less per hectare, how much rainforest exactly do you want to destroy for the extra land? People really need to stop idealizing some fictional ideal past that never was. Preindustrial farming involved mass amounts of backbreaking labour from people with short lifespans to produce little on lots of land, with little to no controls to, say, prevent E. coli contamination.

      that's not even counting animal agriculture & methane emissions

      Then stop eating meat. But don't complain about the farming base that actually, you know, feeds the world, and then some, in order to prop up animal rearing and stupid biofuels policies atop it.

      If we can get enough farms to switch to more ecologically sustainable methods

      People who say this sort of stuff generally have no clue what the actual trends in agriculture have been. For example, the overwhelming majority of the use of pesticides in greenhouses has disappeared in the past couple decades, replaced by biological controls*. Growth regulator usage has also plunged, with reliance on things like light and temperature control (esp. DIF/DROP) instead**. And much more emphasis on environmental controls of fungal pathogens. In outdoor ag, trends are toward IPM (US non-fertilizer chemical usage use peaked around 1980, despite yields today continuing to grow; insecticide usage in particular has plunged since 1980), reduced tillage, more efforts to protect pollinators and predators, etc. Fertilizer use growth slowed dramatically since 1980, runoff levels have been plateauing on a total basis, and on a per-yield basis are already well in decline.

      There's still much more that can be done, but the trends are in the right direction. At the same time, one has to remember that global food needs continue to grow, and this must be met.

      * It's really been remarkable

      • Comparing against "more primitive techniques" is a straw man argument, isn't it? For example, today's organic farming techniques, on average, produce 80% of industrial farming yields & the standard deviation is large (21%), meaning that in some environments organic yields are higher than industrial: https://www.sciencedirect.com/... [sciencedirect.com] I've also read a couple of articles a few years back where innovations in "plant husbandry" has increased what are essentially organic farming techniques dramatically, e.g.
    • Agriculture is some huge greenhouse gas emitter? Do you even know how much agriculture contributes? The US EPA says about 10%.
      https://www.epa.gov/ghgemissio... [epa.gov]

      People need to eat and if it means tripling greenhouse gas emissions to feed the world then I say we do it. Of all the things to pick a fight with on greenhouse gas emissions it is not with agriculture, it is by US EPA estimates the smallest contributor. You want to see people get sick and die? Then making food more expensive with greenhouse gas e

  • Otherwise, we have intelligent fungus studying scientists.
    • by Rei ( 128717 )

      Yeah, my brain really wanted to parse that sentence into fungi that were studying scientists ;)

  • If you find yourself in a hole you cannot climb out of then the first thing to do is stop digging. The IPCC has done studies on global warming, both to establish the impact of CO2 emissions and the best means to minimize that impact. The IPCC has stated that we will continue to miss our goals on CO2 emissions reductions unless there is more energy production from nuclear fission. If the IPCC has collected good data on where the CO2 is coming from and how that impacts the environment then it seems logical

    • If you find yourself in a hole you cannot climb out of then the first thing to do is stop digging. The IPCC has done studies on global warming, both to establish the impact of CO2 emissions and the best means to minimize that impact. The IPCC has stated that we will continue to miss our goals on CO2 emissions reductions unless there is more energy production from nuclear fission.

      I think your analysis is probably accurate. But I'm having problems finding that statement in any of the IPCC reports.

      The most recent IPCC report on mitigation on climate change is here: https://www.ipcc.ch/report/six... [www.ipcc.ch]
      The most recent Synthesis report, putting together the results of all three working groups, is here: https://www.ipcc.ch/report/six... [www.ipcc.ch]

      If the statement is there, I'd very much like to be able to quote it, so if you have citation with page number, please post it.

      • I did a search for "ipcc nuclear energy" in my favorite web search engine, restricted results to the last year, and this came out on top:
        https://nei.org/news/2022/ipcc... [nei.org]

        That's just the top result, there's plenty more to see.

        Also helpful was just searching in the report PDF for the word "nuclear" and there were mentions of how nuclear fission energy is important to mitigating CO2 emissions. There's a lot said in the report on what is restricting faster adoption of nuclear power so finding the bits on how i

        • I did a search for "ipcc nuclear energy" in my favorite web search engine, restricted results to the last year, and this came out on top: https://nei.org/news/2022/ipcc... [nei.org]

          Thanks for trying, but that result is from the Nuclear Energy Institute (quote from their website: "NEI and its members promote the benefits of nuclear power"), not from the IPCC, nor does it include a link to anything from the IPCC.

          Also helpful was just searching in the report PDF for the word "nuclear" and there were mentions of how nuclear fission energy is important to mitigating CO2 emissions.

          On a quick search, all I could find were brief mentions of nuclear in lists of power sources. Couldn't find the statement you made; if it's there, could you cite it?

          ...The IPCC has made a statement of some sort on the importance of nuclear fission to reducing CO2 from energy production a few times per year for several years now

          Could you give me a citation? I want to see what the IPCC said, not what other institutions claimed it said.

  • Whether they can or not is irrelevant.

    The question to ask is "Will they make the planet more resilient to climate change?"

    The answer to that question is, unfortunately, "The Powers That Be will not allow it because they don't see a way to make money from it."

    • The answer to that question is, unfortunately, "The Powers That Be will not allow it because they don't see a way to make money from it."

      "The problem with socialism is that you eventually run out of other people's money."
      -- Margaret Thatcher

      • Re:Wrong question (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Errol backfiring ( 1280012 ) on Monday October 09, 2023 @08:19AM (#63911661) Journal

        Funny how you quote Maggie Hood ("She steals from the poor, and gives it to the rich").

        Investing society's money into society is called Socialism

        Allowing the rich to rob the poor is called capitalism. It is usually right-wing politicians and companies that spend other people's money.

        And even then Maggie Hood was wrong. It all depends on how money is created and who gets it first without having to work for it.

        • by PPH ( 736903 )

          Allowing the rich to rob the poor is called taxes.

          FTFY.

          In a capitalist system, I get to decide who robs me (where to spend my wealth). In a Socialist system, the bureaucrats (the ruling class, i.e. the wealthy) make that decision for me.

        • Investing society's money into society is called Socialism

          In what dictionary?

          Allowing the rich to rob the poor is called capitalism.

          Capitalism is a derogatory term thought up by socialists to describe a free market. When I hand over $50 for a tank of gasoline was I robbed? No, I willingly handed over that money because I know that if I did not then I'd be accused of robbery, or at least that the next time I come around looking for fuel there will be none. I profited by that transaction, as did the filling station. By handing over money for fuel I'm funding the people and processes that brought that fuel to me, and

          • Investing society's money into society is called Socialism

            In what dictionary?

            Indeed, a significant problem with the discourse is that the word "socialism" has been used with so many different meanings that it's nearly meaningless.

            The actual socialists of the late 19th and 20th century, however, did strongly advocate for investing society's money into applications beneficial to society, so indeed one definition of socialism is exactly that. However, this is NOT the definition of socialism which is posed as an alternative to capitalism.

            Allowing the rich to rob the poor is called capitalism.

            Capitalism is a derogatory term thought up by socialists to describe a free market.

            No, it's a term thought up by economists to descr

    • Re:Wrong question (Score:4, Interesting)

      by jmccue ( 834797 ) on Monday October 09, 2023 @08:09AM (#63911647) Homepage
      This plus there is no magic solution. All the solutions that come up never account to the volume of CO2 we added to the air. It is a lot, more than we can scrub out of the atmosphere in a short time. There is only one way to fix and that "fix" should be been started 40 years ago. Pres Carter tried to start it, Reagan killed it. Gore tried, Bush killed it. So now, the only was is to triple or quadruple the price of fossil fuels. Yes it will hurt a lot, but someone needs to take the hit. The longer we wait, the worse the hurt will be.
  • Less foodstuffs produced by mechanized farming. More that can be raised on unimproved land like prairies.

    Cattle, for example.

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