From helping plants to colonize terrestrial earth to treating disease in humans, is there anything fungi can’t do? Chris Dart Neither plants nor animals, fungi are the most underappreciated ...
Now, we know that termites cultivate monocultures of fungi and damselfish farm algae. Humans and animals aren't the only ones farming - microbes are doing it, too, according to researchers who ...
The fungi show potential to target tuberculosis, offering hope of more effective treatments for a disease which still affects thousands of Americans each year.
Protected by their high temperatures mammals thrived in a fungi dominated world. Hundreds of millions of years ago an asteroid strike wiped out 70% of all species on earth. Fungi — nature's ...
Fungi grow by releasing spores that turn into long, filamentous threads that are thinner than a strand of human hair, explained Nicholas P. Money, a fungal biologist at Miami University in Oxford ...
A fungus discovered in the mouse stomach may hold a key to fungal evolution within the gastrointestinal tract, according to new research. The finding suggests that preclinical studies until now have ...