6 ways mushrooms can save the world | Paul Stamets | TED

5,201,834 views ・ 2008-05-08

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:18
I love a challenge, and saving the Earth is probably a good one.
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We all know the Earth is in trouble.
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We have now entered in the 6X,
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the sixth major extinction on this planet.
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I often wondered, if there was a United Organization of Organisms --
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otherwise known as "Uh-Oh" --
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(Laughter) -- and every organism had a right to vote,
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would we be voted on the planet, or off the planet?
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I think that vote is occurring right now.
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I want to present to you a suite of six mycological solutions,
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using fungi, and these solutions are based on mycelium.
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The mycelium infuses all landscapes,
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it holds soils together, it's extremely tenacious.
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This holds up to 30,000 times its mass.
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They're the grand molecular disassemblers of nature -- the soil magicians.
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They generate the humus soils across the landmasses of Earth.
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We have now discovered that there is a multi-directional transfer
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of nutrients between plants, mitigated by the mcyelium --
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so the mycelium is the mother
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that is giving nutrients from alder and birch trees
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to hemlocks, cedars and Douglas firs.
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Dusty and I, we like to say, on Sunday, this is where we go to church.
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I'm in love with the old-growth forest,
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and I'm a patriotic American because we have those.
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Most of you are familiar with Portobello mushrooms.
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And frankly, I face a big obstacle.
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When I mention mushrooms to somebody,
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they immediately think Portobellos or magic mushrooms,
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their eyes glaze over, and they think I'm a little crazy.
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So, I hope to pierce that prejudice forever with this group.
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We call it mycophobia,
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the irrational fear of the unknown, when it comes to fungi.
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Mushrooms are very fast in their growth.
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Day 21, day 23, day 25.
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Mushrooms produce strong antibiotics.
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In fact, we're more closely related to fungi than we are to any other kingdom.
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A group of 20 eukaryotic microbiologists
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published a paper two years ago erecting opisthokonta --
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a super-kingdom that joins animalia and fungi together.
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We share in common the same pathogens.
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Fungi don't like to rot from bacteria,
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and so our best antibiotics come from fungi.
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But here is a mushroom that's past its prime.
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After they sporulate, they do rot.
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But I propose to you that the sequence of microbes
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that occur on rotting mushrooms
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are essential for the health of the forest.
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They give rise to the trees,
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they create the debris fields that feed the mycelium.
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And so we see a mushroom here sporulating.
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And the spores are germinating,
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and the mycelium forms and goes underground.
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In a single cubic inch of soil, there can be more than eight miles of these cells.
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My foot is covering approximately 300 miles of mycelium.
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This is photomicrographs from Nick Read and Patrick Hickey.
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And notice that as the mycelium grows,
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it conquers territory and then it begins the net.
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I've been a scanning electron microscopist for many years,
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I have thousands of electron micrographs,
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and when I'm staring at the mycelium,
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I realize that they are microfiltration membranes.
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We exhale carbon dioxide, so does mycelium.
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It inhales oxygen, just like we do.
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But these are essentially externalized stomachs and lungs.
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And I present to you a concept that these are extended neurological membranes.
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And in these cavities, these micro-cavities form,
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and as they fuse soils, they absorb water.
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These are little wells.
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And inside these wells, then microbial communities begin to form.
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And so the spongy soil not only resists erosion,
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but sets up a microbial universe
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that gives rise to a plurality of other organisms.
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I first proposed, in the early 1990s,
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that mycelium is Earth's natural Internet.
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When you look at the mycelium, they're highly branched.
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And if there's one branch that is broken, then very quickly,
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because of the nodes of crossing --
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Internet engineers maybe call them hot points --
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there are alternative pathways for channeling nutrients and information.
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The mycelium is sentient.
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It knows that you are there.
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When you walk across landscapes,
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it leaps up in the aftermath of your footsteps trying to grab debris.
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So, I believe the invention of the computer Internet
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is an inevitable consequence
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of a previously proven, biologically successful model.
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The Earth invented the computer Internet for its own benefit,
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and we now, being the top organism on this planet,
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are trying to allocate resources in order to protect the biosphere.
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Going way out, dark matter conforms to the same mycelial archetype.
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I believe matter begets life;
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life becomes single cells; single cells become strings;
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strings become chains; chains network.
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And this is the paradigm that we see throughout the universe.
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Most of you may not know that fungi were the first organisms to come to land.
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They came to land 1.3 billion years ago,
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and plants followed several hundred million years later.
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How is that possible?
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It's possible because the mycelium produces oxalic acids,
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and many other acids and enzymes,
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pockmarking rock and grabbing calcium and other minerals
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and forming calcium oxalates.
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Makes the rocks crumble, and the first step in the generation of soil.
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Oxalic acid is two carbon dioxide molecules joined together.
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So, fungi and mycelium
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sequester carbon dioxide in the form of calcium oxalates.
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And all sorts of other oxalates
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are also sequestering carbon dioxide through the minerals
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that are being formed and taken out of the rock matrix.
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This was first discovered in 1859.
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This is a photograph by Franz Hueber.
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This photograph's taken 1950s in Saudi Arabia.
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420 million years ago, this organism existed.
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It was called Prototaxites.
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Prototaxites, laying down, was about three feet tall.
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The tallest plants on Earth at that time were less than two feet.
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Dr. Boyce, at the University of Chicago,
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published an article in the Journal of Geology
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this past year determining that Prototaxites was a giant fungus,
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a giant mushroom.
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Across the landscapes of Earth were dotted these giant mushrooms.
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All across most land masses.
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And these existed for tens of millions of years.
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Now, we've had several extinction events, and as we march forward --
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65 million years ago -- most of you know about it --
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we had an asteroid impact.
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The Earth was struck by an asteroid,
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a huge amount of debris was jettisoned into the atmosphere.
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Sunlight was cut off, and fungi inherited the Earth.
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Those organisms that paired with fungi were rewarded,
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because fungi do not need light.
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More recently, at Einstein University,
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they just determined that fungi use radiation as a source of energy,
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much like plants use light.
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So, the prospect of fungi existing on other planets elsewhere,
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I think, is a forgone conclusion,
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at least in my own mind.
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The largest organism in the world is in Eastern Oregon.
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I couldn't miss it. It was 2,200 acres in size:
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2,200 acres in size, 2,000 years old.
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The largest organism on the planet is a mycelial mat, one cell wall thick.
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How is it that this organism can be so large,
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and yet be one cell wall thick,
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whereas we have five or six skin layers that protect us?
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The mycelium, in the right conditions, produces a mushroom --
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it bursts through with such ferocity that it can break asphalt.
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We were involved with several experiments.
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I'm going to show you six, if I can,
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solutions for helping to save the world.
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Battelle Laboratories and I joined up in Bellingham, Washington.
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There were four piles saturated with diesel and other petroleum waste:
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one was a control pile; one pile was treated with enzymes;
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one pile was treated with bacteria;
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and our pile we inoculated with mushroom mycelium.
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The mycelium absorbs the oil.
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The mycelium is producing enzymes --
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peroxidases -- that break carbon-hydrogen bonds.
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These are the same bonds that hold hydrocarbons together.
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So, the mycelium becomes saturated with the oil,
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and then, when we returned six weeks later,
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all the tarps were removed,
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all the other piles were dead, dark and stinky.
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We came back to our pile, it was covered
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with hundreds of pounds of oyster mushrooms,
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and the color changed to a light form.
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The enzymes remanufactured the hydrocarbons
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into carbohydrates -- fungal sugars.
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Some of these mushrooms are very happy mushrooms.
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They're very large.
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They're showing how much nutrition that they could've obtained.
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But something else happened, which was an epiphany in my life.
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They sporulated, the spores attract insects,
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the insects laid eggs, eggs became larvae.
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Birds then came, bringing in seeds,
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and our pile became an oasis of life.
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Whereas the other three piles were dead, dark and stinky,
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and the PAH's -- the aromatic hydrocarbons --
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went from 10,000 parts per million to less than 200 in eight weeks.
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The last image we don't have.
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The entire pile was a green berm of life.
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These are gateway species,
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vanguard species that open the door for other biological communities.
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So I invented burlap sacks, bunker spawn --
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and putting the mycelium -- using storm blown debris,
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you can take these burlap sacks and put them downstream
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from a farm that's producing E. coli, or other wastes,
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or a factory with chemical toxins,
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and it leads to habitat restoration.
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So, we set up a site in Mason County, Washington,
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and we've seen a dramatic decrease in the amount of coliforms.
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And I'll show you a graph here.
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This is a logarithmic scale, 10 to the eighth power.
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There's more than a 100 million colonies per gram,
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and 10 to the third power is around 1,000.
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In 48 hours to 72 hours, these three mushroom species
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reduced the amount of coliform bacteria 10,000 times.
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Think of the implications.
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This is a space-conservative method that uses storm debris --
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and we can guarantee that we will have storms every year.
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So, this one mushroom, in particular, has drawn our interest over time.
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This is my wife Dusty,
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with a mushroom called Fomitopsis officinalis -- Agarikon.
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It's a mushroom exclusive to the old-growth forest
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that Dioscorides first described in 65 A.D.
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as a treatment against consumption.
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This mushroom grows in Washington State, Oregon,
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northern California, British Columbia, now thought to be extinct in Europe.
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May not seem that large --
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let's get closer.
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This is extremely rare fungus.
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Our team -- and we have a team of experts that go out --
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we went out 20 times in the old-growth forest last year.
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We found one sample to be able to get into culture.
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Preserving the genome of these fungi in the old-growth forest
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I think is absolutely critical for human health.
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I've been involved with the U.S. Defense Department BioShield program.
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We submitted over 300 samples of mushrooms that were boiled in hot water,
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and mycelium harvesting these extracellular metabolites.
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And a few years ago,
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we received these results.
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We have three different strains of Agarikon mushrooms
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that were highly active against poxviruses.
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Dr. Earl Kern, who's a smallpox expert
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of the U.S. Defense Department, states that any compounds
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that have a selectivity index of two or more are active.
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10 or greater are considered to be very active.
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Our mushroom strains were in the highly active range.
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There's a vetted press release that you can read --
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it's vetted by DOD --
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if you Google "Stamets" and "smallpox."
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Or you can go to NPR.org and listen to a live interview.
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So, encouraged by this, naturally we went to flu viruses.
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And so, for the first time, I am showing this.
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We have three different strains of Agarikon mushrooms
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highly active against flu viruses.
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Here's the selectivity index numbers --
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against pox, you saw 10s and 20s -- now against flu viruses,
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compared to the ribavirin controls,
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we have an extraordinarily high activity.
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And we're using a natural extract
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within the same dosage window as a pure pharmaceutical.
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We tried it against flu A viruses -- H1N1, H3N2 --
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as well as flu B viruses.
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So then we tried a blend,
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and in a blend combination we tried it against H5N1,
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and we got greater than 1,000 selectivity index.
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(Applause)
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I then think that we can make the argument
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that we should save the old-growth forest
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as a matter of national defense.
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(Applause)
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I became interested in entomopathogenic fungi --
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fungi that kill insects.
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Our house was being destroyed by carpenter ants.
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So, I went to the EPA homepage, and they were recommending studies
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with metarhizium species of a group of fungi
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that kill carpenter ants, as well as termites.
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I did something that nobody else had done.
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I actually chased the mycelium, when it stopped producing spores.
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These are spores -- this is in their spores.
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I was able to morph the culture
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into a non-sporulating form.
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And so the industry has spent over 100 million dollars
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specifically on bait stations to prevent termites from eating your house.
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But the insects aren't stupid,
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and they would avoid the spores when they came close,
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and so I morphed the cultures into a non-sporulating form.
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And I got my daughter's Barbie doll dish,
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I put it right where a bunch of carpenter ants
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were making debris fields, every day,
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in my house, and the ants were attracted to the mycelium,
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because there's no spores.
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They gave it to the queen.
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One week later, I had no sawdust piles whatsoever.
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And then -- a delicate dance between dinner and death --
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the mycelium is consumed by the ants,
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they become mummified, and, boing, a mushroom pops out of their head.
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(Laughter)
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Now after sporulation, the spores repel.
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So, the house is no longer suitable for invasion.
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So, you have a near-permanent solution for reinvasion of termites.
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And so my house came down, I received my first patent
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against carpenter ants, termites and fire ants.
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Then we tried extracts, and lo and behold,
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we can steer insects to different directions.
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This has huge implications.
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I then received my second patent -- and this is a big one.
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It's been called an Alexander Graham Bell patent.
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It covers over 200,000 species.
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This is the most disruptive technology --
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I've been told by executives of the pesticide industry --
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that they have ever witnessed.
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This could totally revamp the pesticide industries throughout the world.
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You could fly 100 Ph.D. students under the umbrella of this concept,
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because my supposition is that entomopathogenic fungi,
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prior to sporulation, attract the very insects
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that are otherwise repelled by those spores.
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And so I came up with a Life Box, because I needed a delivery system.
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The Life Box -- you're gonna be getting a DVD of the TED conference --
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you add soil, you add water,
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you have mycorrhizal and endophytic fungi as well as spores,
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like of the Agarikon mushroom.
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The seeds then are mothered by this mycelium.
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And then you put tree seeds in here,
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and then you end up growing -- potentially --
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an old-growth forest from a cardboard box.
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I want to reinvent the delivery system,
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and the use of cardboard around the world,
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so they become ecological footprints.
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If there's a YouTube-like site that you could put up,
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you could make it interactive, zip code specific --
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where people could join together,
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and through satellite imaging systems,
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through Virtual Earth or Google Earth,
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you could confirm carbon credits are being sequestered
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by the trees that are coming through Life Boxes.
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You could take a cardboard box delivering shoes,
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you could add water -- I developed this for the refugee community --
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corns, beans and squash and onions.
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I took several containers -- my wife said, if I could do this, anybody could --
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and I ended up growing a seed garden.
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Then you harvest the seeds --
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and thank you, Eric Rasmussen, for your help on this --
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and then you're harvesting the seed garden.
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Then you can harvest the kernels, and then you just need a few kernels.
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I add mycelium to it, and then I inoculate the corncobs.
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Now, three corncobs, no other grain --
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lots of mushrooms begin to form.
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Too many withdrawals from the carbon bank,
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and so this population will be shut down.
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But watch what happens here.
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The mushrooms then are harvested,
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but very importantly,
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the mycelium has converted the cellulose into fungal sugars.
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And so I thought, how could we address the energy crisis in this country?
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And we came up with Econol.
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Generating ethanol from cellulose using mycelium as an intermediary --
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and you gain all the benefits that I've described to you already.
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But to go from cellulose to ethanol is ecologically unintelligent,
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and I think that we need to be econologically intelligent
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about the generation of fuels.
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So, we build the carbon banks on the planet, renew the soils.
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These are a species that we need to join with.
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I think engaging mycelium can help save the world.
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Thank you very much.
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(Applause)
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About this website

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