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Furthermore, nutrient transfer from older to younger trees on a network can dramatically increase growth rates of the younger receivers. [55] Physiological changes due to environmental stress have also initiated nutrient transfer by causing the movement of carbon from the roots of the stressed plant to the roots of a conspecific plant over a ...
Andrew Pulver of The Guardian wrote "With its spectacular footage of growth and decay and impassioned speeches about the magic of mushrooms, this documentary is a treat for the eye and ear". [9] Rex Reed of The New York Observer called the documentary "charming", [ 10 ] while John DeFore of The Hollywood Reporter called the film an "[e]ye ...
A video she posted on YouTube in 2020, "Five Minutes of Pink Oyster Mushroom Playing Modular Synthesizer", had more than a million views. [1] [4] Mixdown magazine said "... might just be our favourite YouTube video released this year." [5] In 2021 she live streamed a "mushroom concert" using blue oyster mushrooms. [6]
Part self-help and part spiritual, Worton's If Trees Could Talk is a guide to taking time out to connect with nature, talk to trees, and to live a happier and more fulfilled life. [5] The author, who lives in England, believes that "all trees are living, breathing organisms that humans can connect with and talk to on a deeper level through ...
Talk; Contents move to ... Filthy Riches is an American television series that aired on the National Geographic Channel. It premiered on April 20, 2014 ...
Christian author John C. King wrote a detailed rebuttal of Allegro's theory in the 1970 book A Christian View of the Mushroom Myth; he notes that neither fly agarics nor their host trees are found in the Middle East, even though cedars and pines are found there, and highlights the tenuous nature of the links between biblical and Sumerian names ...
The Japanese name メシマコブ is composed of メシマ, an island of Gotō, Nagasaki, where this mushroom used to grow, and コブ, which means bump, referring to the mushroom's appearance. Per Wu et al. (2012) citing Ito (1955) and Imazeki and Hongo (1989), this is a mushroom that is always said to be on mulberry trees.
Cyttaria hariotii is an edible mushroom commonly called llao llao, llaullao and pan de indio. The fungus, found in Patagonia, southern Chile and Argentina, is parasitic on Nothofagus (Southern beech) trees. The fungus affects its hosts internally in its sap ducts; the tree defends itself by generating galls to bypass the sap blockages. The ...