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Mushrooms use convectively created airflows to disperse their spores.


ABSTRACT: Thousands of basidiomycete fungal species rely on mushroom spores to spread across landscapes. It has long been thought that spores depend on favorable winds for dispersal--that active control of spore dispersal by the parent fungus is limited to an impulse delivered to the spores to carry them clear of the gill surface. Here we show that evaporative cooling of the air surrounding the pileus creates convective airflows capable of carrying spores at speeds of centimeters per second. Convective cells can transport spores from gaps that may be only 1 cm high and lift spores 10 cm or more into the air. This work reveals how mushrooms tolerate and even benefit from crowding and explains their high water needs.

SUBMITTER: Dressaire E 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4801285 | biostudies-literature | 2016 Mar

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Mushrooms use convectively created airflows to disperse their spores.

Dressaire Emilie E   Yamada Lisa L   Song Boya B   Roper Marcus M  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20160229 11


Thousands of basidiomycete fungal species rely on mushroom spores to spread across landscapes. It has long been thought that spores depend on favorable winds for dispersal--that active control of spore dispersal by the parent fungus is limited to an impulse delivered to the spores to carry them clear of the gill surface. Here we show that evaporative cooling of the air surrounding the pileus creates convective airflows capable of carrying spores at speeds of centimeters per second. Convective ce  ...[more]

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