6 comments

  • TruffleLabs 10 hours ago
    Zombie fungi pulled from amber is the makings of a movie ;)
    • metadat 8 hours ago
      Next iteration: Jurassic Park + The Last of Us
    • shawn_w 8 hours ago
      The Velociraptor With All The Gifts.
    • adityaathalye 7 hours ago
      https://bombaylitmag.com/contribution/the-cordyception/

      In my imagined world of Halahala, silent stories have occupied prime real estate since 2005. I think of them like music without lyrics, jazz-like in the experience. The Cordyception is another riff on Halahala’s staple theme of nature, sustainability and our obsession with a certain ladder. An Attenborough documentary led me to these marvellous fungi called Cordyceps and the rest is pure Halahala. The fungi infect and take over specific insect-hosts – body and mind – commanding them to a high vantage point for dispersing spores.

      I swear I drew this before the pandemic

      —Appupen

    • excalibur 9 hours ago
      Sounds like a more promising direction than what the Jurrasic Park franchise is doing currently.
  • nervousvarun 42 minutes ago
    Everyone is understandably referencing the Last of Us but Common Side Effects deserves a mention as well.

    I for one welcome our new mushroom overlords.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_Side_Effects

  • pfdietz 8 hours ago
    These aren't necessarily related to today's Ophiocordyceps fungus. Fungi that take control of arthropods and cause them to climb to disperse spores have convergently evolved more than once, including Arthrophaga myriapodina, which affects millipedes, and is in a different Division (the level above Class) from Ophiocordyceps.

    Convergent evolution is more common than you might think. Trees, for example, have separately evolved at least 100 times.

    • dclowd9901 5 hours ago
      I recently visited the national history museum and finally got a sense of the _weirdness_ of prehistoric trees. No bark, a green trunk (utilizing photosynthesis), tall like a palm tree. I'd love to see something like that now.
      • kzrdude 2 hours ago
        Well, bamboo comes to mind as a really weird tree. It's not a tree, but it's the size of one..
      • climb_stealth 5 hours ago
        That sounds awesome! The oddest trees I have come across had big thorns like roses all over the trunk. Kind of hard to see because the trunk is so big, but you'd very quickly notice leaning against it.

        That was in a botanical garden in Australia. No idea what they were or how common they are. Blew my mind.

        • galangalalgol 1 hour ago
          Ceiba speciosa maybe? That is a weird tree for sure. I grew up where there were wild thorny honeylocust trees. The trunks are spotted with dense clusters of branching thorns, some of which are 8" long and stiff enough to puncture tractor tires. To paraphrase family guy, nature is scary.
          • dotancohen 50 minutes ago
            Yeah, we've got these in Beersheba (south of Israel). The only tree my ten year old won't climb. They've also got really interesting cotton-like fruits, though I'm not brave enough to taste them.
      • pif 1 hour ago
        > prehistoric trees

        I suppose you are actually talking of a time preceding prehistory by a fair lot!

      • williamdclt 3 hours ago
        > visited the national history museum

        what nation?

    • pabs3 3 hours ago
      My favourite tree evolution thing is the forests in the Galapagos being evolved from dandelion seeds blown in on the wind from South America.
    • n_kr 6 hours ago
      > Trees, for example, have separately evolved at least 100 times.

      Can you explain more? Sounds interesting

      • andrewflnr 6 hours ago
        Trees are barely a firm category of plant at all. It's basically just tall plants with woody stems. Plants can gain and lose woody stems without too much trouble (relatively speaking, over evolutionary time). So any time a plant species currently growing soft stems can benefit from being really tall, they have a good chance of evolving into "trees".
      • jgilias 6 hours ago
        • pfdietz 57 minutes ago
          Thank you for link.

          As an aside there: the blog post briefly talks about birds. It turns out that membrane wings are much easier to evolve than feathered wings. There have been lots of membrane winged creatures (including "birds" with membrane wings in the Jurassic) but not nearly as many appearances of feathered wings.

          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HxA38gH8Gj4

  • usrbinbash 2 hours ago
    "You want Zombie Apocalypse?! Because THAT's how you get Zombie Apocalypse!"
  • downrightmike 6 hours ago
    Fungi likely precedes the Dinos by 100's millions of years
  • ingohelpinger 8 hours ago
    [flagged]