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spununderground

Society for the Protection of Underground Networks (SPUN)

SPUN is a science-based initiative dedicated to mapping and protecting Earth’s underground fungal networks 🍄
SPUN Youth ➡️ @spun.youth

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SPUN is taking Earth Day underground.

How can you help?
- Share the video
- Download the logo from our bio
- Post on April 22
- Use #UnderEarthDay
- Tag @spununderground

This is a global call to protect life belowground and conserve the underground fungal networks that sustain life aboveground.

Make April 22 #UnderEarthDay.

Huge thanks to @cosmosheldrake for the music and Justin Magness for the video.

#fungi #mycology #ProtectTheUnderground


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1 months ago


How do you protect hidden fungal networks? Protect the trees they support. New research published in Biodiversity and Conservation about our first expedition to the Chilean Coast Range.

Co-led by Dr. Camille Truong and Dr. Adriana Corrales, the findings highlight that endangered ancient conifers, called Alerce (Fitzroya cupressoides), shelter an enormous amount of fungi belowground that have helped the forest, a massive carbon sink, survive and adapt over millennia. Removing one tree can destroy an entire underground community of forest helpers that took thousands of years to assemble.

These forests are now threatened by land-use shifts, climate change, and major infrastructure projects, including a proposed road that would run just a few hundred meters from alerce forests, increasing the threat of fires, tourist pressure, and invasive species.

These huge millennial trees serve as an “umbrella” that protects soil fungal diversity and we need to protect this diversity both above and belowground.

Read the paper in our bio.

Congrats to all the authors: Camille Truong ( @golondrelle ), Adriana Corrales ( @adricorrales33 ), Bethan Manley ( @bethanmanley ) , Michael E. Van Nuland, Justin D. Stewart ( @thecrobe ), Rocío Urrutia-Jalabert, Roberto Godoy, Merlin Sheldrake ( @merlin.sheldrake ), Giuliana Furci( @giulifungi ), E. Toby Kiers ( @tobykiers ) & César Marín ( @genestogaia ).

Massive thank you to Universidad Santo Tomás ( @santotomas_ustsantiago ), Universidad Austral de Chile ( @universidadaustraldechile ), Universidad de La Frontera (Chile)( ufro.temuco), Fungi Foundation ( @fungifoundation ), Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria ( @royalbotanicgardensvic ) , and the University of Melbourne in Australia ( @unimelb ).

Photos by Tomás Munita ( @tomas.munita )

#SoilBiodiversity #MycorrhizalFungi #Fungi #ForestEcology #ConservationScience


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2 months ago

How do you protect hidden fungal networks? Protect the trees they support. New research published in Biodiversity and Conservation about our first expedition to the Chilean Coast Range.

Co-led by Dr. Camille Truong and Dr. Adriana Corrales, the findings highlight that endangered ancient conifers, called Alerce (Fitzroya cupressoides), shelter an enormous amount of fungi belowground that have helped the forest, a massive carbon sink, survive and adapt over millennia. Removing one tree can destroy an entire underground community of forest helpers that took thousands of years to assemble.

These forests are now threatened by land-use shifts, climate change, and major infrastructure projects, including a proposed road that would run just a few hundred meters from alerce forests, increasing the threat of fires, tourist pressure, and invasive species.

These huge millennial trees serve as an “umbrella” that protects soil fungal diversity and we need to protect this diversity both above and belowground.

Read the paper in our bio.

Congrats to all the authors: Camille Truong ( @golondrelle ), Adriana Corrales ( @adricorrales33 ), Bethan Manley ( @bethanmanley ) , Michael E. Van Nuland, Justin D. Stewart ( @thecrobe ), Rocío Urrutia-Jalabert, Roberto Godoy, Merlin Sheldrake ( @merlin.sheldrake ), Giuliana Furci( @giulifungi ), E. Toby Kiers ( @tobykiers ) & César Marín ( @genestogaia ).

Massive thank you to Universidad Santo Tomás ( @santotomas_ustsantiago ), Universidad Austral de Chile ( @universidadaustraldechile ), Universidad de La Frontera (Chile)( ufro.temuco), Fungi Foundation ( @fungifoundation ), Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria ( @royalbotanicgardensvic ) , and the University of Melbourne in Australia ( @unimelb ).

Photos by Tomás Munita ( @tomas.munita )

#SoilBiodiversity #MycorrhizalFungi #Fungi #ForestEcology #ConservationScience


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2 months ago

How do you protect hidden fungal networks? Protect the trees they support. New research published in Biodiversity and Conservation about our first expedition to the Chilean Coast Range.

Co-led by Dr. Camille Truong and Dr. Adriana Corrales, the findings highlight that endangered ancient conifers, called Alerce (Fitzroya cupressoides), shelter an enormous amount of fungi belowground that have helped the forest, a massive carbon sink, survive and adapt over millennia. Removing one tree can destroy an entire underground community of forest helpers that took thousands of years to assemble.

These forests are now threatened by land-use shifts, climate change, and major infrastructure projects, including a proposed road that would run just a few hundred meters from alerce forests, increasing the threat of fires, tourist pressure, and invasive species.

These huge millennial trees serve as an “umbrella” that protects soil fungal diversity and we need to protect this diversity both above and belowground.

Read the paper in our bio.

Congrats to all the authors: Camille Truong ( @golondrelle ), Adriana Corrales ( @adricorrales33 ), Bethan Manley ( @bethanmanley ) , Michael E. Van Nuland, Justin D. Stewart ( @thecrobe ), Rocío Urrutia-Jalabert, Roberto Godoy, Merlin Sheldrake ( @merlin.sheldrake ), Giuliana Furci( @giulifungi ), E. Toby Kiers ( @tobykiers ) & César Marín ( @genestogaia ).

Massive thank you to Universidad Santo Tomás ( @santotomas_ustsantiago ), Universidad Austral de Chile ( @universidadaustraldechile ), Universidad de La Frontera (Chile)( ufro.temuco), Fungi Foundation ( @fungifoundation ), Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria ( @royalbotanicgardensvic ) , and the University of Melbourne in Australia ( @unimelb ).

Photos by Tomás Munita ( @tomas.munita )

#SoilBiodiversity #MycorrhizalFungi #Fungi #ForestEcology #ConservationScience


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2 months ago

How do you protect hidden fungal networks? Protect the trees they support. New research published in Biodiversity and Conservation about our first expedition to the Chilean Coast Range.

Co-led by Dr. Camille Truong and Dr. Adriana Corrales, the findings highlight that endangered ancient conifers, called Alerce (Fitzroya cupressoides), shelter an enormous amount of fungi belowground that have helped the forest, a massive carbon sink, survive and adapt over millennia. Removing one tree can destroy an entire underground community of forest helpers that took thousands of years to assemble.

These forests are now threatened by land-use shifts, climate change, and major infrastructure projects, including a proposed road that would run just a few hundred meters from alerce forests, increasing the threat of fires, tourist pressure, and invasive species.

These huge millennial trees serve as an “umbrella” that protects soil fungal diversity and we need to protect this diversity both above and belowground.

Read the paper in our bio.

Congrats to all the authors: Camille Truong ( @golondrelle ), Adriana Corrales ( @adricorrales33 ), Bethan Manley ( @bethanmanley ) , Michael E. Van Nuland, Justin D. Stewart ( @thecrobe ), Rocío Urrutia-Jalabert, Roberto Godoy, Merlin Sheldrake ( @merlin.sheldrake ), Giuliana Furci( @giulifungi ), E. Toby Kiers ( @tobykiers ) & César Marín ( @genestogaia ).

Massive thank you to Universidad Santo Tomás ( @santotomas_ustsantiago ), Universidad Austral de Chile ( @universidadaustraldechile ), Universidad de La Frontera (Chile)( ufro.temuco), Fungi Foundation ( @fungifoundation ), Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria ( @royalbotanicgardensvic ) , and the University of Melbourne in Australia ( @unimelb ).

Photos by Tomás Munita ( @tomas.munita )

#SoilBiodiversity #MycorrhizalFungi #Fungi #ForestEcology #ConservationScience


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2 months ago

How do you protect hidden fungal networks? Protect the trees they support. New research published in Biodiversity and Conservation about our first expedition to the Chilean Coast Range.

Co-led by Dr. Camille Truong and Dr. Adriana Corrales, the findings highlight that endangered ancient conifers, called Alerce (Fitzroya cupressoides), shelter an enormous amount of fungi belowground that have helped the forest, a massive carbon sink, survive and adapt over millennia. Removing one tree can destroy an entire underground community of forest helpers that took thousands of years to assemble.

These forests are now threatened by land-use shifts, climate change, and major infrastructure projects, including a proposed road that would run just a few hundred meters from alerce forests, increasing the threat of fires, tourist pressure, and invasive species.

These huge millennial trees serve as an “umbrella” that protects soil fungal diversity and we need to protect this diversity both above and belowground.

Read the paper in our bio.

Congrats to all the authors: Camille Truong ( @golondrelle ), Adriana Corrales ( @adricorrales33 ), Bethan Manley ( @bethanmanley ) , Michael E. Van Nuland, Justin D. Stewart ( @thecrobe ), Rocío Urrutia-Jalabert, Roberto Godoy, Merlin Sheldrake ( @merlin.sheldrake ), Giuliana Furci( @giulifungi ), E. Toby Kiers ( @tobykiers ) & César Marín ( @genestogaia ).

Massive thank you to Universidad Santo Tomás ( @santotomas_ustsantiago ), Universidad Austral de Chile ( @universidadaustraldechile ), Universidad de La Frontera (Chile)( ufro.temuco), Fungi Foundation ( @fungifoundation ), Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria ( @royalbotanicgardensvic ) , and the University of Melbourne in Australia ( @unimelb ).

Photos by Tomás Munita ( @tomas.munita )

#SoilBiodiversity #MycorrhizalFungi #Fungi #ForestEcology #ConservationScience


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2 months ago

How do you protect hidden fungal networks? Protect the trees they support. New research published in Biodiversity and Conservation about our first expedition to the Chilean Coast Range.

Co-led by Dr. Camille Truong and Dr. Adriana Corrales, the findings highlight that endangered ancient conifers, called Alerce (Fitzroya cupressoides), shelter an enormous amount of fungi belowground that have helped the forest, a massive carbon sink, survive and adapt over millennia. Removing one tree can destroy an entire underground community of forest helpers that took thousands of years to assemble.

These forests are now threatened by land-use shifts, climate change, and major infrastructure projects, including a proposed road that would run just a few hundred meters from alerce forests, increasing the threat of fires, tourist pressure, and invasive species.

These huge millennial trees serve as an “umbrella” that protects soil fungal diversity and we need to protect this diversity both above and belowground.

Read the paper in our bio.

Congrats to all the authors: Camille Truong ( @golondrelle ), Adriana Corrales ( @adricorrales33 ), Bethan Manley ( @bethanmanley ) , Michael E. Van Nuland, Justin D. Stewart ( @thecrobe ), Rocío Urrutia-Jalabert, Roberto Godoy, Merlin Sheldrake ( @merlin.sheldrake ), Giuliana Furci( @giulifungi ), E. Toby Kiers ( @tobykiers ) & César Marín ( @genestogaia ).

Massive thank you to Universidad Santo Tomás ( @santotomas_ustsantiago ), Universidad Austral de Chile ( @universidadaustraldechile ), Universidad de La Frontera (Chile)( ufro.temuco), Fungi Foundation ( @fungifoundation ), Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria ( @royalbotanicgardensvic ) , and the University of Melbourne in Australia ( @unimelb ).

Photos by Tomás Munita ( @tomas.munita )

#SoilBiodiversity #MycorrhizalFungi #Fungi #ForestEcology #ConservationScience


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2 months ago

How do you protect hidden fungal networks? Protect the trees they support. New research published in Biodiversity and Conservation about our first expedition to the Chilean Coast Range.

Co-led by Dr. Camille Truong and Dr. Adriana Corrales, the findings highlight that endangered ancient conifers, called Alerce (Fitzroya cupressoides), shelter an enormous amount of fungi belowground that have helped the forest, a massive carbon sink, survive and adapt over millennia. Removing one tree can destroy an entire underground community of forest helpers that took thousands of years to assemble.

These forests are now threatened by land-use shifts, climate change, and major infrastructure projects, including a proposed road that would run just a few hundred meters from alerce forests, increasing the threat of fires, tourist pressure, and invasive species.

These huge millennial trees serve as an “umbrella” that protects soil fungal diversity and we need to protect this diversity both above and belowground.

Read the paper in our bio.

Congrats to all the authors: Camille Truong ( @golondrelle ), Adriana Corrales ( @adricorrales33 ), Bethan Manley ( @bethanmanley ) , Michael E. Van Nuland, Justin D. Stewart ( @thecrobe ), Rocío Urrutia-Jalabert, Roberto Godoy, Merlin Sheldrake ( @merlin.sheldrake ), Giuliana Furci( @giulifungi ), E. Toby Kiers ( @tobykiers ) & César Marín ( @genestogaia ).

Massive thank you to Universidad Santo Tomás ( @santotomas_ustsantiago ), Universidad Austral de Chile ( @universidadaustraldechile ), Universidad de La Frontera (Chile)( ufro.temuco), Fungi Foundation ( @fungifoundation ), Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria ( @royalbotanicgardensvic ) , and the University of Melbourne in Australia ( @unimelb ).

Photos by Tomás Munita ( @tomas.munita )

#SoilBiodiversity #MycorrhizalFungi #Fungi #ForestEcology #ConservationScience


2.6K
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2 months ago


How do you protect hidden fungal networks? Protect the trees they support. New research published in Biodiversity and Conservation about our first expedition to the Chilean Coast Range.

Co-led by Dr. Camille Truong and Dr. Adriana Corrales, the findings highlight that endangered ancient conifers, called Alerce (Fitzroya cupressoides), shelter an enormous amount of fungi belowground that have helped the forest, a massive carbon sink, survive and adapt over millennia. Removing one tree can destroy an entire underground community of forest helpers that took thousands of years to assemble.

These forests are now threatened by land-use shifts, climate change, and major infrastructure projects, including a proposed road that would run just a few hundred meters from alerce forests, increasing the threat of fires, tourist pressure, and invasive species.

These huge millennial trees serve as an “umbrella” that protects soil fungal diversity and we need to protect this diversity both above and belowground.

Read the paper in our bio.

Congrats to all the authors: Camille Truong ( @golondrelle ), Adriana Corrales ( @adricorrales33 ), Bethan Manley ( @bethanmanley ) , Michael E. Van Nuland, Justin D. Stewart ( @thecrobe ), Rocío Urrutia-Jalabert, Roberto Godoy, Merlin Sheldrake ( @merlin.sheldrake ), Giuliana Furci( @giulifungi ), E. Toby Kiers ( @tobykiers ) & César Marín ( @genestogaia ).

Massive thank you to Universidad Santo Tomás ( @santotomas_ustsantiago ), Universidad Austral de Chile ( @universidadaustraldechile ), Universidad de La Frontera (Chile)( ufro.temuco), Fungi Foundation ( @fungifoundation ), Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria ( @royalbotanicgardensvic ) , and the University of Melbourne in Australia ( @unimelb ).

Photos by Tomás Munita ( @tomas.munita )

#SoilBiodiversity #MycorrhizalFungi #Fungi #ForestEcology #ConservationScience


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2 months ago

How do you protect hidden fungal networks? Protect the trees they support. New research published in Biodiversity and Conservation about our first expedition to the Chilean Coast Range.

Co-led by Dr. Camille Truong and Dr. Adriana Corrales, the findings highlight that endangered ancient conifers, called Alerce (Fitzroya cupressoides), shelter an enormous amount of fungi belowground that have helped the forest, a massive carbon sink, survive and adapt over millennia. Removing one tree can destroy an entire underground community of forest helpers that took thousands of years to assemble.

These forests are now threatened by land-use shifts, climate change, and major infrastructure projects, including a proposed road that would run just a few hundred meters from alerce forests, increasing the threat of fires, tourist pressure, and invasive species.

These huge millennial trees serve as an “umbrella” that protects soil fungal diversity and we need to protect this diversity both above and belowground.

Read the paper in our bio.

Congrats to all the authors: Camille Truong ( @golondrelle ), Adriana Corrales ( @adricorrales33 ), Bethan Manley ( @bethanmanley ) , Michael E. Van Nuland, Justin D. Stewart ( @thecrobe ), Rocío Urrutia-Jalabert, Roberto Godoy, Merlin Sheldrake ( @merlin.sheldrake ), Giuliana Furci( @giulifungi ), E. Toby Kiers ( @tobykiers ) & César Marín ( @genestogaia ).

Massive thank you to Universidad Santo Tomás ( @santotomas_ustsantiago ), Universidad Austral de Chile ( @universidadaustraldechile ), Universidad de La Frontera (Chile)( ufro.temuco), Fungi Foundation ( @fungifoundation ), Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria ( @royalbotanicgardensvic ) , and the University of Melbourne in Australia ( @unimelb ).

Photos by Tomás Munita ( @tomas.munita )

#SoilBiodiversity #MycorrhizalFungi #Fungi #ForestEcology #ConservationScience


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2 months ago

Who lives underground?

Using machine learning on a dataset of more than 2.8 billion fungal sequences from 130 countries, we've created the first high-resolution maps predicting mycorrhizal diversity and endemism at 1 km² resolution globally. The research is out now in @nature_the_journal.

Key finding: 90% of predicted mycorrhizal biodiversity hotspots lie outside protected areas.

The data powers a new interactive tool we built at SPUN called Underground Atlas, letting anyone explore mycorrhizal diversity and endemism patterns anywhere on Earth. Link in bio.

This publication brings together SPUN, @globalfungi, GlobalAMFungi, the Global Soil Mycobiome consortium, and researchers worldwide to reveal patterns of fungal richness and rarity across biomes — from the Amazon to the Arctic.

What's next? Action is needed to incorporate these findings into conservation planning, environmental law, and climate policy. By protecting mycorrhizal systems, we can support global biodiversity, safeguard underground carbon flows, boost crop productivity, and increase ecosystem resilience.

Open Access Paper: "Global Hotspots of Mycorrhizal Fungal Richness are Poorly Protected." Link in bio.

Led by: Michael Van Nuland
Co-authors: Colin Averill, Justin D. Stewart (@thecrobe), Oleh Prylutskyi, Adriana Corrales, Laura G. van Galen, Bethan F. Manley, Clara Qin, Thomas Lauber, Vladimir Mikryukov, Olesia Dulia, Giuliana Furci (@giulifungi), César Marín (@cesarmarin7), Merlin Sheldrake (@merlin.sheldrake), James T. Weedon, Kabir G. Peay (@mykophile) , Charlie K. Cornwallis, Tomáš Větrovský, Petr Kohout, Petr Baldrian, Leho Tedersoo, Stuart A. West (@stuwest8), Thomas W. Crowther (@twcrowther), Toby Kiers (@tobykiers), SPUN Mapping Consortium, Johan van den Hoogen.

#ProtectTheUnderground #UndergroundAtlas #SoilScience #Fungi #Mycorrhizae #SoilBiodiversity


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10 months ago

Most people want to go to the moon. But there are unexplored galaxies just below our feet.

Toby Kiers, evolutionary biologist, Tyler Prize laureate, MacArthur “genius” Fellow, and co-founder of SPUN, has spent more than two decades asking the questions most of us never think to pose:

How does a brainless organism make decisions? What does it mean to be a fungus?

Beneath every footstep lies a network older than civilization. Two to five million species trading phosphorus for carbon, nitrogen for sugar, water for protection. Calculating. Negotiating. Sanctioning cheaters — swiftly, severely, ingeniously. All without a single neuron firing.

A new episode of See See by Ceci: the wonder beneath the soil — biological, strategic, and ancient. The circulatory system that connects all life on Earth.

Episode 8 - Available May 28th, 2026.

Credits:

Some of the footage featured in this reel is courtesy of AMOLF and Society for the Protection of Underground Networks (SPUN).

Corentin Bisot - AMOLF, VU Amsterdam.

Rachael Cargill - VU Amsterdam, AMOLF, SPUN and Justin Magness-Flow Sample 1.

#seeseepodcast #season4 #mind


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1
1 days ago

Protected areas help animals survive. But do they help fungi?

New study published in Conservation Letters, led by Clara Qin, shows how a team of scientists built the most comprehensive models ever of the ranges of 2,858 important fungal species and compared them to global maps of land conservation. The 17.4 percent of the Earth's land that is protected overlaps with the ranges of about one-fifth of all animals. But the protections often don't overlap with important species of mycorrhizal fungi that are essential for the survival of plant life on Earth.

This research reveals gaps in current conservation efforts and shows how improved range maps can help better protect the biodiversity living belowground, marking an important step toward integrating mycorrhizal fungi into conservation planning.

All authors: Clara Qin, Sujai Kumar, Jinsu Yi Elhance, Bethan Manley, Adriana Corrales, Anne Polyakov, Justin Stewart, Stephanie Kivlin, Iñaki Odriozola, Tomas Vetrovsky, Petr Kohout, Petr Baldrian, Toby Kiers, Michael Van Nuland.

Full paper in bio.

#MycorrhizalFungi #SpeciesProtection #RangeMaps


158
6 days ago

Protected areas help animals survive. But do they help fungi?

New study published in Conservation Letters, led by Clara Qin, shows how a team of scientists built the most comprehensive models ever of the ranges of 2,858 important fungal species and compared them to global maps of land conservation. The 17.4 percent of the Earth's land that is protected overlaps with the ranges of about one-fifth of all animals. But the protections often don't overlap with important species of mycorrhizal fungi that are essential for the survival of plant life on Earth.

This research reveals gaps in current conservation efforts and shows how improved range maps can help better protect the biodiversity living belowground, marking an important step toward integrating mycorrhizal fungi into conservation planning.

All authors: Clara Qin, Sujai Kumar, Jinsu Yi Elhance, Bethan Manley, Adriana Corrales, Anne Polyakov, Justin Stewart, Stephanie Kivlin, Iñaki Odriozola, Tomas Vetrovsky, Petr Kohout, Petr Baldrian, Toby Kiers, Michael Van Nuland.

Full paper in bio.

#MycorrhizalFungi #SpeciesProtection #RangeMaps


158
6 days ago

Protected areas help animals survive. But do they help fungi?

New study published in Conservation Letters, led by Clara Qin, shows how a team of scientists built the most comprehensive models ever of the ranges of 2,858 important fungal species and compared them to global maps of land conservation. The 17.4 percent of the Earth's land that is protected overlaps with the ranges of about one-fifth of all animals. But the protections often don't overlap with important species of mycorrhizal fungi that are essential for the survival of plant life on Earth.

This research reveals gaps in current conservation efforts and shows how improved range maps can help better protect the biodiversity living belowground, marking an important step toward integrating mycorrhizal fungi into conservation planning.

All authors: Clara Qin, Sujai Kumar, Jinsu Yi Elhance, Bethan Manley, Adriana Corrales, Anne Polyakov, Justin Stewart, Stephanie Kivlin, Iñaki Odriozola, Tomas Vetrovsky, Petr Kohout, Petr Baldrian, Toby Kiers, Michael Van Nuland.

Full paper in bio.

#MycorrhizalFungi #SpeciesProtection #RangeMaps


158
6 days ago


Protected areas help animals survive. But do they help fungi?

New study published in Conservation Letters, led by Clara Qin, shows how a team of scientists built the most comprehensive models ever of the ranges of 2,858 important fungal species and compared them to global maps of land conservation. The 17.4 percent of the Earth's land that is protected overlaps with the ranges of about one-fifth of all animals. But the protections often don't overlap with important species of mycorrhizal fungi that are essential for the survival of plant life on Earth.

This research reveals gaps in current conservation efforts and shows how improved range maps can help better protect the biodiversity living belowground, marking an important step toward integrating mycorrhizal fungi into conservation planning.

All authors: Clara Qin, Sujai Kumar, Jinsu Yi Elhance, Bethan Manley, Adriana Corrales, Anne Polyakov, Justin Stewart, Stephanie Kivlin, Iñaki Odriozola, Tomas Vetrovsky, Petr Kohout, Petr Baldrian, Toby Kiers, Michael Van Nuland.

Full paper in bio.

#MycorrhizalFungi #SpeciesProtection #RangeMaps


158
6 days ago

Protected areas help animals survive. But do they help fungi?

New study published in Conservation Letters, led by Clara Qin, shows how a team of scientists built the most comprehensive models ever of the ranges of 2,858 important fungal species and compared them to global maps of land conservation. The 17.4 percent of the Earth's land that is protected overlaps with the ranges of about one-fifth of all animals. But the protections often don't overlap with important species of mycorrhizal fungi that are essential for the survival of plant life on Earth.

This research reveals gaps in current conservation efforts and shows how improved range maps can help better protect the biodiversity living belowground, marking an important step toward integrating mycorrhizal fungi into conservation planning.

All authors: Clara Qin, Sujai Kumar, Jinsu Yi Elhance, Bethan Manley, Adriana Corrales, Anne Polyakov, Justin Stewart, Stephanie Kivlin, Iñaki Odriozola, Tomas Vetrovsky, Petr Kohout, Petr Baldrian, Toby Kiers, Michael Van Nuland.

Full paper in bio.

#MycorrhizalFungi #SpeciesProtection #RangeMaps


158
6 days ago

Protected areas help animals survive. But do they help fungi?

New study published in Conservation Letters, led by Clara Qin, shows how a team of scientists built the most comprehensive models ever of the ranges of 2,858 important fungal species and compared them to global maps of land conservation. The 17.4 percent of the Earth's land that is protected overlaps with the ranges of about one-fifth of all animals. But the protections often don't overlap with important species of mycorrhizal fungi that are essential for the survival of plant life on Earth.

This research reveals gaps in current conservation efforts and shows how improved range maps can help better protect the biodiversity living belowground, marking an important step toward integrating mycorrhizal fungi into conservation planning.

All authors: Clara Qin, Sujai Kumar, Jinsu Yi Elhance, Bethan Manley, Adriana Corrales, Anne Polyakov, Justin Stewart, Stephanie Kivlin, Iñaki Odriozola, Tomas Vetrovsky, Petr Kohout, Petr Baldrian, Toby Kiers, Michael Van Nuland.

Full paper in bio.

#MycorrhizalFungi #SpeciesProtection #RangeMaps


158
6 days ago

Protected areas help animals survive. But do they help fungi?

New study published in Conservation Letters, led by Clara Qin, shows how a team of scientists built the most comprehensive models ever of the ranges of 2,858 important fungal species and compared them to global maps of land conservation. The 17.4 percent of the Earth's land that is protected overlaps with the ranges of about one-fifth of all animals. But the protections often don't overlap with important species of mycorrhizal fungi that are essential for the survival of plant life on Earth.

This research reveals gaps in current conservation efforts and shows how improved range maps can help better protect the biodiversity living belowground, marking an important step toward integrating mycorrhizal fungi into conservation planning.

All authors: Clara Qin, Sujai Kumar, Jinsu Yi Elhance, Bethan Manley, Adriana Corrales, Anne Polyakov, Justin Stewart, Stephanie Kivlin, Iñaki Odriozola, Tomas Vetrovsky, Petr Kohout, Petr Baldrian, Toby Kiers, Michael Van Nuland.

Full paper in bio.

#MycorrhizalFungi #SpeciesProtection #RangeMaps


158
6 days ago

I took a break from teaching during spring break in March to explore the underground in the Mojave Desert with @spununderground (Society for the Protection of Underground Networks). We sampled the underground fungal communities associated with Joshua trees and extreme ecosystems in Death Valley.

Joshua trees are facing increasing pressure from climate change, wildfire, and habitat disturbance, and we’re trying to better understand whether soil fungal symbionts may help influence seedling establishment and survival in extreme desert environments.

One of the best parts of projects like this is getting to collaborate with passionate people who care deeply about understanding and protecting these ecosystems. @spununderground scientists Anne and Jinsu were a treasure to sample in these extreme conditions with!*

Working diligently now on the molecular side of things at @uscedu

Exciting to see some of this work highlighted today in the @latimes . Read the story in the following link, and follow this account to see what we found.

Article link: https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2026-05-19/joshua-tree-disappearing-project-wants-to-save-it

*and photographer/helper extraordinaire @gabedela


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14
1 weeks ago

Inside the fungal cell, beneath the surface, fungi are running a sophisticated show. Thanks to emerging technologies, we can capture a snapshot of this complex performance belowground.

Using metatranscriptomics, we can gather information encoded in fungal RNA to understand the function and activity of fungal genes at exact moments in time.

Preserving the RNA of these extraordinary networks is a huge challenge because the RNA degrades quickly. As a result, samples need to be flash frozen.
For more on the process behind this, check out our previous post on metatranscriptomics.

Lab image: Loreto Oyarte Gálvez, VU / AMOLF

Photography on slide 3: SPUN & Konstantinos Tsakalidis

#ProtectTheUnderground #Mycology #MycorrhizalFungi #RNA


145
1 weeks ago


Inside the fungal cell, beneath the surface, fungi are running a sophisticated show. Thanks to emerging technologies, we can capture a snapshot of this complex performance belowground.

Using metatranscriptomics, we can gather information encoded in fungal RNA to understand the function and activity of fungal genes at exact moments in time.

Preserving the RNA of these extraordinary networks is a huge challenge because the RNA degrades quickly. As a result, samples need to be flash frozen.
For more on the process behind this, check out our previous post on metatranscriptomics.

Lab image: Loreto Oyarte Gálvez, VU / AMOLF

Photography on slide 3: SPUN & Konstantinos Tsakalidis

#ProtectTheUnderground #Mycology #MycorrhizalFungi #RNA


145
1 weeks ago

Inside the fungal cell, beneath the surface, fungi are running a sophisticated show. Thanks to emerging technologies, we can capture a snapshot of this complex performance belowground.

Using metatranscriptomics, we can gather information encoded in fungal RNA to understand the function and activity of fungal genes at exact moments in time.

Preserving the RNA of these extraordinary networks is a huge challenge because the RNA degrades quickly. As a result, samples need to be flash frozen.
For more on the process behind this, check out our previous post on metatranscriptomics.

Lab image: Loreto Oyarte Gálvez, VU / AMOLF

Photography on slide 3: SPUN & Konstantinos Tsakalidis

#ProtectTheUnderground #Mycology #MycorrhizalFungi #RNA


145
1 weeks ago

How can you protect something that hasn’t yet been named?

A recent study revealed that only 155,000 of the roughly 2-3 million fungal species on Earth have been formally described. The rest are “dark taxa”, known only by the DNA sequences that can’t be linked to named or described species.

When a species hasn’t been formally described, it is much more difficult to study and protect.

Our recent work found that hotspots of ectomycorrhizal dark taxa are concentrated in tropical and southern-hemisphere regions, including parts of Southeast Asia, South America, and Africa. Yet much of the research and funding on ectomycorrhizal fungi has been focused in the Global North.

Closing this gap will require more field sampling, more sequencing, and more support for scientists working in these regions.

Research published in @currentbiology by SPUN scientists Laura van Galen, Adriana Corrales, Camille Truong, Sujai Kumar, Bethan Manley, Justin Stewart, Michael Van Nuland, and Toby Kiers, alongside colleagues, Johan van den Hoogen, Petr Kohout, Petr Baldrian, Tomáš Větrovský, and Thomas W. Crowther.

Link to the full study in our bio.

Huge thanks to Loreto Oyarte Gálvez of AMOLF and VU for the lab material.

Post production by Riccardo Rachello.

#ProtectTheUnderground #MycorrhizalFungi #DarkTaxa #DNASequences #Mycology


469
13
3 weeks ago

How can you protect something that hasn’t yet been named?

A recent study revealed that only 155,000 of the roughly 2-3 million fungal species on Earth have been formally described. The rest are “dark taxa”, known only by the DNA sequences that can’t be linked to named or described species.

When a species hasn’t been formally described, it is much more difficult to study and protect.

Our recent work found that hotspots of ectomycorrhizal dark taxa are concentrated in tropical and southern-hemisphere regions, including parts of Southeast Asia, South America, and Africa. Yet much of the research and funding on ectomycorrhizal fungi has been focused in the Global North.

Closing this gap will require more field sampling, more sequencing, and more support for scientists working in these regions.

Research published in @currentbiology by SPUN scientists Laura van Galen, Adriana Corrales, Camille Truong, Sujai Kumar, Bethan Manley, Justin Stewart, Michael Van Nuland, and Toby Kiers, alongside colleagues, Johan van den Hoogen, Petr Kohout, Petr Baldrian, Tomáš Větrovský, and Thomas W. Crowther.

Link to the full study in our bio.

Huge thanks to Loreto Oyarte Gálvez of AMOLF and VU for the lab material.

Post production by Riccardo Rachello.

#ProtectTheUnderground #MycorrhizalFungi #DarkTaxa #DNASequences #Mycology


469
13
3 weeks ago

How can you protect something that hasn’t yet been named?

A recent study revealed that only 155,000 of the roughly 2-3 million fungal species on Earth have been formally described. The rest are “dark taxa”, known only by the DNA sequences that can’t be linked to named or described species.

When a species hasn’t been formally described, it is much more difficult to study and protect.

Our recent work found that hotspots of ectomycorrhizal dark taxa are concentrated in tropical and southern-hemisphere regions, including parts of Southeast Asia, South America, and Africa. Yet much of the research and funding on ectomycorrhizal fungi has been focused in the Global North.

Closing this gap will require more field sampling, more sequencing, and more support for scientists working in these regions.

Research published in @currentbiology by SPUN scientists Laura van Galen, Adriana Corrales, Camille Truong, Sujai Kumar, Bethan Manley, Justin Stewart, Michael Van Nuland, and Toby Kiers, alongside colleagues, Johan van den Hoogen, Petr Kohout, Petr Baldrian, Tomáš Větrovský, and Thomas W. Crowther.

Link to the full study in our bio.

Huge thanks to Loreto Oyarte Gálvez of AMOLF and VU for the lab material.

Post production by Riccardo Rachello.

#ProtectTheUnderground #MycorrhizalFungi #DarkTaxa #DNASequences #Mycology


469
13
3 weeks ago

How can you protect something that hasn’t yet been named?

A recent study revealed that only 155,000 of the roughly 2-3 million fungal species on Earth have been formally described. The rest are “dark taxa”, known only by the DNA sequences that can’t be linked to named or described species.

When a species hasn’t been formally described, it is much more difficult to study and protect.

Our recent work found that hotspots of ectomycorrhizal dark taxa are concentrated in tropical and southern-hemisphere regions, including parts of Southeast Asia, South America, and Africa. Yet much of the research and funding on ectomycorrhizal fungi has been focused in the Global North.

Closing this gap will require more field sampling, more sequencing, and more support for scientists working in these regions.

Research published in @currentbiology by SPUN scientists Laura van Galen, Adriana Corrales, Camille Truong, Sujai Kumar, Bethan Manley, Justin Stewart, Michael Van Nuland, and Toby Kiers, alongside colleagues, Johan van den Hoogen, Petr Kohout, Petr Baldrian, Tomáš Větrovský, and Thomas W. Crowther.

Link to the full study in our bio.

Huge thanks to Loreto Oyarte Gálvez of AMOLF and VU for the lab material.

Post production by Riccardo Rachello.

#ProtectTheUnderground #MycorrhizalFungi #DarkTaxa #DNASequences #Mycology


469
13
3 weeks ago

How can you protect something that hasn’t yet been named?

A recent study revealed that only 155,000 of the roughly 2-3 million fungal species on Earth have been formally described. The rest are “dark taxa”, known only by the DNA sequences that can’t be linked to named or described species.

When a species hasn’t been formally described, it is much more difficult to study and protect.

Our recent work found that hotspots of ectomycorrhizal dark taxa are concentrated in tropical and southern-hemisphere regions, including parts of Southeast Asia, South America, and Africa. Yet much of the research and funding on ectomycorrhizal fungi has been focused in the Global North.

Closing this gap will require more field sampling, more sequencing, and more support for scientists working in these regions.

Research published in @currentbiology by SPUN scientists Laura van Galen, Adriana Corrales, Camille Truong, Sujai Kumar, Bethan Manley, Justin Stewart, Michael Van Nuland, and Toby Kiers, alongside colleagues, Johan van den Hoogen, Petr Kohout, Petr Baldrian, Tomáš Větrovský, and Thomas W. Crowther.

Link to the full study in our bio.

Huge thanks to Loreto Oyarte Gálvez of AMOLF and VU for the lab material.

Post production by Riccardo Rachello.

#ProtectTheUnderground #MycorrhizalFungi #DarkTaxa #DNASequences #Mycology


469
13
3 weeks ago

How can you protect something that hasn’t yet been named?

A recent study revealed that only 155,000 of the roughly 2-3 million fungal species on Earth have been formally described. The rest are “dark taxa”, known only by the DNA sequences that can’t be linked to named or described species.

When a species hasn’t been formally described, it is much more difficult to study and protect.

Our recent work found that hotspots of ectomycorrhizal dark taxa are concentrated in tropical and southern-hemisphere regions, including parts of Southeast Asia, South America, and Africa. Yet much of the research and funding on ectomycorrhizal fungi has been focused in the Global North.

Closing this gap will require more field sampling, more sequencing, and more support for scientists working in these regions.

Research published in @currentbiology by SPUN scientists Laura van Galen, Adriana Corrales, Camille Truong, Sujai Kumar, Bethan Manley, Justin Stewart, Michael Van Nuland, and Toby Kiers, alongside colleagues, Johan van den Hoogen, Petr Kohout, Petr Baldrian, Tomáš Větrovský, and Thomas W. Crowther.

Link to the full study in our bio.

Huge thanks to Loreto Oyarte Gálvez of AMOLF and VU for the lab material.

Post production by Riccardo Rachello.

#ProtectTheUnderground #MycorrhizalFungi #DarkTaxa #DNASequences #Mycology


469
13
3 weeks ago

A mushroom is often the most visible part of a massive underground ectomycorrhizal fungus. The part that is hidden is just as beautiful and complex. When conditions are right (moisture, temperature, low-disturbance), some species of ectomycorrhizal fungi produce mushrooms that release spores. Those mushrooms can appear suddenly, then disappear just as quickly. All the while, plant-fungal associations continue hidden belowground.

Photo Credits:

Slide 1, 3: Mateo Barrenengoa (@mateobarrenengoa)

Slide  2, 4: Tomás Munita (@tomas.munita)

#ProtectTheUnderground #MycorrhizalFungi #Mushrooms


526
5
3 weeks ago

A mushroom is often the most visible part of a massive underground ectomycorrhizal fungus. The part that is hidden is just as beautiful and complex. When conditions are right (moisture, temperature, low-disturbance), some species of ectomycorrhizal fungi produce mushrooms that release spores. Those mushrooms can appear suddenly, then disappear just as quickly. All the while, plant-fungal associations continue hidden belowground.

Photo Credits:

Slide 1, 3: Mateo Barrenengoa (@mateobarrenengoa)

Slide  2, 4: Tomás Munita (@tomas.munita)

#ProtectTheUnderground #MycorrhizalFungi #Mushrooms


526
5
3 weeks ago

A mushroom is often the most visible part of a massive underground ectomycorrhizal fungus. The part that is hidden is just as beautiful and complex. When conditions are right (moisture, temperature, low-disturbance), some species of ectomycorrhizal fungi produce mushrooms that release spores. Those mushrooms can appear suddenly, then disappear just as quickly. All the while, plant-fungal associations continue hidden belowground.

Photo Credits:

Slide 1, 3: Mateo Barrenengoa (@mateobarrenengoa)

Slide  2, 4: Tomás Munita (@tomas.munita)

#ProtectTheUnderground #MycorrhizalFungi #Mushrooms


526
5
3 weeks ago

A mushroom is often the most visible part of a massive underground ectomycorrhizal fungus. The part that is hidden is just as beautiful and complex. When conditions are right (moisture, temperature, low-disturbance), some species of ectomycorrhizal fungi produce mushrooms that release spores. Those mushrooms can appear suddenly, then disappear just as quickly. All the while, plant-fungal associations continue hidden belowground.

Photo Credits:

Slide 1, 3: Mateo Barrenengoa (@mateobarrenengoa)

Slide  2, 4: Tomás Munita (@tomas.munita)

#ProtectTheUnderground #MycorrhizalFungi #Mushrooms


526
5
3 weeks ago

How do mycorrhizal fungi help plants access nutrients?

Mycorrhizal fungi help plants access nutrients like phosphorus and nitrogen by forming vast underground networks of fine, thread-like structures called hyphae. These hyphae grow through soil extending far beyond the reach of plant roots helping them access nutrients from distant areas. In exchange, plants supply the fungi with carbon-rich compounds, including sugars and lipids.

This video shows carbon-rich lipids flow through mycorrhizal fungal mycelium, courtesy of Rachael Cargill of @vuamsterdam and AMOLF, revealing bursts of the dynamic activity occurring at the microscopic scale.

#SPUN #Hyphae #MycorrhizalNetworks #MicroscopeFootage #ProtectTheUnderground


231
5
4 weeks ago

How do fungi drive island regeneration on one of Earth’s most remote atolls?

Palmyra Atoll is one of the healthiest, intact atolls on Earth—so ecologically sensitive that visiting researchers freeze their clothes at night to kill invasive species. It shelters hundreds of thousands of seabirds, untouched coral reefs, and the largest crab species in the world. It’s also home to Pisonia grandis, a critical tree species and nesting ground for the massive seabird population. Pisonia trees are the backbone of Palmyra Atoll. Pisonias also support many of the world’s other 598 atolls. However, little is known about Pisonia’s mycorrhizal fungal partners.

Our team travelled to the middle of the Pacific to map the diversity of mycorrhizal fungi across the atoll and identify the fungi associated with Pisonia trees. The expedition was led by Charlie K. Cornwallis of @lunduniversity, Stuart A. West of the @oxford_uni, Alex Wegmann of @nature_hi_pal, and SPUN’s Toby Kiers.

Our findings, published today in @currentbiology, reveal that fungi are vital to sustaining life in this remote ecosystem. The symbiotic relationship between Pisonia and its ectomycorrhizal partners is so strong that every tree root sampled across Palmyra’s soils contained a species of mycorrhizal fungi called Tomentella. Even the aerial roots of Pisonia were colonized by Tomentella.

Read the open-access paper and watch the full short film in our bio.

Our research confirms “a hidden dependency at the heart of an entire ecosystem”. Lead author Charlie Cornwallis said, “The health of Palmyra's coral reefs ultimately depends on seabirds, which depend on Pisonia trees for nesting, which depend on fungi. Remove any link in that chain and the whole system could unravel.”

The study underscores that conservation isn't just about species you can see. On remote island systems like atolls, if symbiotic partners are lost, replacements can be scarce. Documenting hidden underground fungi is important for preventing ecosystem collapse and supporting restoration.

#ProtectTheUnderground #PalmyraAtoll #MycorrhizalFungi


243
6
4 weeks ago

Meet the people taking Earth Day underground.

Help us make today #UnderEarthDay.

• Visit www.spun.earth/under-earth-day or the link in bio.
• Share the video
• Download the logo and post it today
• Use #UnderEarthDay
• Tag @spununderground

#fungi #mycorrhizalfungi #ProtectTheUnderground


274
4
1 months ago


View Instagram Stories in Secret

The Instagram Story Viewer is an easy tool that lets you secretly watch and save Instagram stories, videos, photos, or IGTV. With this service, you can download content and enjoy it offline whenever you like. If you find something interesting on Instagram that you’d like to check out later or want to view stories while staying anonymous, our Viewer is perfect for you. Anonstories offers an excellent solution for keeping your identity hidden. Instagram first launched the Stories feature in August 2023, which was quickly adopted by other platforms due to its engaging, time-sensitive format. Stories let users share quick updates, whether photos, videos, or selfies, enhanced with text, emojis, or filters, and are visible for only 24 hours. This limited time frame creates high engagement compared to regular posts. In today’s world, Stories are one of the most popular ways to connect and communicate on social media. However, when you view a Story, the creator can see your name in their viewer list, which may be a privacy concern. What if you wish to browse Stories without being noticed? Here’s where Anonstories becomes useful. It allows you to watch public Instagram content without revealing your identity. Simply enter the username of the profile you’re curious about, and the tool will display their latest Stories. Features of Anonstories Viewer: - Anonymous Browsing: Watch Stories without showing up on the viewer list. - No Account Needed: View public content without signing up for an Instagram account. - Content Download: Save any Stories content directly to your device for offline use. - View Highlights: Access Instagram Highlights, even beyond the 24-hour window. - Repost Monitoring: Track the reposts or engagement levels on Stories for personal profiles. Limitations: - This tool works only with public accounts; private accounts remain inaccessible. Benefits: - Privacy-Friendly: Watch any Instagram content without being noticed. - Simple and Easy: No app installation or registration required. - Exclusive Tools: Download and manage content in ways Instagram doesn’t offer.

Advantages of Anonstories

Explore IG Stories Privately

Keep track of Instagram updates discreetly while protecting your privacy and staying anonymous.


Private Instagram Viewer

View profiles and photos anonymously with ease using the Private Profile Viewer.


Story Viewer for Free

This free tool allows you to view Instagram Stories anonymously, ensuring your activity remains hidden from the story uploader.

Frequently asked questions

 
Anonymity

Anonstories lets users view Instagram stories without alerting the creator.

 
Device Compatibility

Works seamlessly on iOS, Android, Windows, macOS, and modern browsers like Chrome and Safari.

 
Safety and Privacy

Prioritizes secure, anonymous browsing without requiring login credentials.

 
No Registration

Users can view public stories by simply entering a username—no account needed.

 
Supported Formats

Downloads photos (JPEG) and videos (MP4) with ease.

 
Cost

The service is free to use.

 
Private Accounts

Content from private accounts can only be accessed by followers.

 
File Usage

Files are for personal or educational use only and must comply with copyright rules.

 
How It Works

Enter a public username to view or download stories. The service generates direct links for saving content locally.