GLOWING MUSHROOM: Psychedelic New Species Seen
source: http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2009/10/photogalleries/glowing-mushrooms-pictures/in...
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- pjacobs51
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The tiny mushroom is one of 7 new species of glow-in-the-dark fungi found around the world, bringing the total known to 71, according to a study that appeared October 5 in the journal Mycologia.
San Francisco State University's Dennis Desjardin and colleagues scouted for mushrooms during new moons, in rain forests so dark they often couldn't see their hands in front of their faces, he said.
But "when you look down at the ground, it's like looking up at the sky," Desjardin said. "Every little 'star' was a little mushroom--it was just fantastic."
M. luxaeterna has a distinctive sticky gel on its stem that probably keeps it moist during the heat of the day. Unwitting insects get trapped in this natural fly paper, said Desjardin, who discovered the fungi with the University of Sao Paulo's Cassius V. Stevani.
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DreSandoval
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can i taste test them???
- 2 years ago
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DreSandoval
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krush_productions
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Awesome, these little guys could replace my reading light.
- 2 years ago
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krush_productions
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martin0
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cool, but can you eat them?
- 2 years ago
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martin0
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cabinettags
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Many of the edible kinds of mushrooms are grown in caves. As this was discovered in a rain forest I assume that heat and humidity are the main requirements?
If so, this would make a really neat house plant. It would be way cool to have plants that glow.
- 2 years ago
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cabinettags
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24French
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Glowing in the dark is good, very good.
- 2 years ago
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24French
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mister_stu
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Not as interesting as the story about phallus drewesii, the tiny wood mushroom named after the proud scientist of the same name.
- 2 years ago
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mister_stu
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idealist
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i bet if i eat em, ill glow in the drak toooooo!
- 2 years ago
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idealist
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schobiz
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There's nothing in this article that implies anything about having psychedelic properties. I suppose you are calling them psychedelic because they glow in the dark? That's a bit misleading.
Mushrooms (in all their forms and functions) are truly fascinating! There are many types that we know nothing about. Check out Paul Stamets if you're interested in mushrooms.
- 2 years ago
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schobiz
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becktionary83
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I bet it looks cool in a pitch black rain forest with all those shrooms glowing.
- 2 years ago
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becktionary83
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jesuswho
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Pizza anyone?
- 2 years ago
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jesuswho
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frizzlecat
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jesuswho:
Yeah, sure. I just had a big lunch, but whatever.
- 2 years ago
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frizzlecat
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Nephwrack
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they have those in japan too, different species, but they glow.
- 2 years ago
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Nephwrack
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SparkShark16
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So cool! it must look beautiful when there are millions growing all around you!
- 2 years ago
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SparkShark16
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Thargor19
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Mmmm I love mushies! The psychedelic kind, the nutritional kind, whatever! I love em all!
- 2 years ago
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Thargor19
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FishaHouse777
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Are they really hallucinogenic though?
Mushrooms usually have great properties if eaten, from nutrition to cures to psychadelic properties. That is as long as they aren't lethally toxic :P - 2 years ago
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FishaHouse777
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pandaman2105
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aaaahhhh...these look magically amazing!
- 2 years ago
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pandaman2105
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leahl
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brilliant! I love these kinds of discoveries...would love to understand more about how and why they evolved....
- 2 years ago
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leahl
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Valentin0o
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leahl:
they didn't evolve, god just made them like that
- 2 years ago
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Valentin0o
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Gravity_Man
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leahl:
That's a very appropriate question. Why would there be a sudden increase in light display mushrooms that "attract flies like fly paper"? Well, in the past year there's been a lowering of the bat population and they eat lots of airborne nasties keeping their counts down.
So as the bats began dying from the white fungus in their noses (causing them to lose so much sleep they couldn't get enough to eat and die) here somewhere totally removed from anywhere near the bats has begun proliferating a bunch of insect-attracting mushrooms.
Gee, that Evolution Guy must be pretty smart to make unrelated lifeforms adjust to each other totally ignorant like this.
- 2 years ago
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Gravity_Man
