地下真菌网络总长度超过 100 万亿公里
Subterranean fungi networks more than 100 quadrillion km in length

原始链接: https://www.theguardian.com/science/2026/jun/11/arbuscular-mycorrhizal-fungi-plant-life-climate-global-mapping-study

一项发表在《科学》期刊上的开创性研究绘制了全球丛枝菌根真菌的分布图,揭示了一个庞大的地下网络,该网络维持着全球超过 70% 的植物生存,并有助于调节全球气候。地下网络保护协会(SPUN)的研究人员估计,这些真菌网络的总长度达 110 千万亿公里,几乎是地球到太阳距离的 7.5 亿倍。 这些真菌通过交换养分获取植物碳,在土壤健康和固碳方面发挥着至关重要的作用。然而,研究警告称,与野生生态系统相比,包括耕作和使用化肥在内的集约化农业使真菌密度降低了近 50%。这种退化威胁着粮食安全、养分分配和水质。 研究人员强调,保护这些“隐秘”的网络对于应对气候变化至关重要。通过培育更健康的微生物群落,农民可以减少对人工肥料的依赖,同时增强土壤固碳的自然能力。这份全球首张此类地图为自然资源保护者和政策制定者提供了重要的参考基准,突显了将保护地下生态系统作为应对粮食安全和气候危机战略的一部分的紧迫性。

近期的一场 Hacker News 讨论探讨了有关全球地下真菌网络的研究发现,据估计其总长度超过 10 千万亿公里。用户们针对这一庞大数字的意义展开了辩论;一些人指出,在微观尺度下,这种累积长度很常见——正如人体的血管如果首尾相连,可以绕地球两圈一样。 讨论涉及了多个侧面: * **科学怀疑论:** 评论者质疑了来源材料中的方法论和密度图,特别是关于美国西南部和青藏高原等干旱或高海拔地区真菌分布的准确性。 * **哲学推测:** 讨论中出现了一个轻松的辩论,探讨这样一个广阔且相互连接的网络是否可能拥有一种“冰川式”的行星意识。 * **实地观察:** 用户们分享了关于自家后院中令人惊叹的真菌生物多样性的趣事,证明了这些网络不仅仅是理论上的,同时也存在于城市环境中。 总的来说,这一讨论串突显了人类在面对宏大且隐秘的生物尺度时所展现出的着迷,同时也利用实际的、分形的和数学的背景,对那些“令人印象深刻”的科学统计数据进行了理性审视。
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原文

Our planet’s soils contain enough of the subterranean fungi that sustain plant life and help regulate the climate to stretch from the Earth to the sun almost three-quarters of a billion times, a groundbreaking new study has found.

Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi are networks of tubular cells called hyphae that sustain life on Earth by forming critical partnerships with more than 70% of plants. The networks, which have been forming for about 475 million years, provide nutrients and water in exchange for the carbon produced by the plants, and help to regulate the climate by drawing carbon into soils.

And yet, despite their importance, very little is known about their distribution and density across natural ecosystems. This was one of the reasons that the Society for the Protection of Underground Networks (Spun) was set up in 2021 by a global network of scientists and researchers.

Now, in a new study published in Science and referred to as “one of the most exciting of my career” by one researcher, a Spun team have used machine-learning models with data from more than 16,000 soil cores from around the world to produce the first ever global map of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi networks.

They calculated that the fungi networks, if stretched end to end, would reach a length of 110 quadrillion kilometres, which is almost 750m times the distance from the Earth to the sun.

“There could be up to 10 metres (32ft) of mycorrhizal network in just a teaspoon of soil,” said Dr Justin Stewart, lead author of the study.

Maps showing densities of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi in different parts of the world

The study also documents potential threats to this life-giving infrastructure, with the researchers finding that, on average, network densities in cropland are 47.3% lower than in wild ecosystems.

“A lot of large-scale agriculture practices harm fungal networks,” said Stewart. “The most apparent way is with something like tilling, where you go into a soil and literally rip it up.” Fertilisers or fungicides can also “disrupt the symbiosis between the plants and the fungi”.

The scientists warned that the consequences of the loss of fungal networks could be wide ranging. Lower-density fungal networks reduce the soil’s ability to store carbon and distribute nutrients, and the networks also protect waterways from nitrogen, phosphorus and other chemicals.

“If they disappear, there’s going to be a lot more chemicals going into waterways,” said Dr Toby Kiers, an author of the study, who called the study one of the most exciting of her life. “Ultimately, the aim of the research is to help scientists and decision-makers understand where fungal systems are thriving and where they are threatened. We will be presenting these data to governments at the upcoming desertification Cop in Mongolia in August.”

Through their mapping, the researchers found that grasslands contained the densest hyphal systems. Regions including the Everglades in Florida, the Sudd flooded grasslands of South Sudan, and prairie and steppe ecosystems globally were all found to have “exceptionally high” density.

However, the study highlights that these regions are often poorly protected and are becoming increasingly degraded.

The researchers also called for closer collaboration between farmers and fungi. Stewart noted that current crop yields were artificially boosted by heavy fertiliser use. He argued that if farmers were encouraged to protect and support soil fungi, plants could obtain more nutrients naturally, reducing the need for fertilisers, while the fungi would help transfer more carbon deep into the soil, improving carbon storage.

Kiers said: “There’s a big movement now to not only restore communities above ground, the things that you can see, the plants and animals, but also to restore underground fungal communities. And this dataset allows us to have benchmarks for what a healthy microbial community can look like.”

The biologist and co-author Dr Merlin Sheldrake said the study helped to find “ways that we can better work with fungi to help address many of the unfolding challenges of our times, from food security to climate change”.

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