The deal is this: Mushrooms need a substrate in order to have their mycelium thrive - and a certain about of light, adequate temperature, and humidity. But once they've got these basic conditions (which are not at all difficult to accomplish - you can even grow oyster mushrooms on coffee beans in your own apartment!) the mushrooms will grow, and flourish.
In the Ecuadorian Amazon, the guys who write at the Fungal Jungle blog successfully used mushrooms to clean up an oil spill and talk about the whole process. An oil spill recently happened in the San Francisco Bay (see here for the oil spill story) and... you guessed it - mushrooms - with a growing substrate of human hair mats (yes, human hair... bet you didn't guess that part!) are being used in some experimental sites for cleaning it up. Kudos to the folks at Matter of Trust for collecting human hair for just this purpose. The YouTube video about the clean-up is worth checking out.
I'm all for supporting cancer research and wigs for those treated for cancer, like the Locks of Love and Pantene program of using hair for wigs. But next time I chop off my locks, Matter of Trust is getting my donation; it'll be my little contribution back to the fungi kingdom, and the Earth.
1 comment:
I was unaware of this oyster mushrooms, I looked for some pictures of these creatures and they look so cool and their ability to clean and absorb and yet not be able to keep it their system is quite amazing. Are they hard to find or as easy as to buy viagra or as to buy some eggs?
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