How to grow mushrooms – and help save the planet

A biologist and mushroom expert explains the magic of mushrooms and highlights their more unusual properties.

Hannah Stephenson
Monday 09 August 2021 04:35 EDT
Garden mushrooms (Alamy/PA)
Garden mushrooms (Alamy/PA)

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These days we can buy mushrooms in all shapes and sizes, foraging for them in fields and forest or even having a go at cultivating them ourselves.

But there’s more to fungi than just eating them, says biologist and mushroom expert Merlin Sheldrake.

There are fungi that can alter the weather, some that can survive in deep space, while others can consume nuclear waste, he writes in his acclaimed book, Entangled Life. Nearly all life on earth relies on fungi to exist and survive, he has discovered.

“For as long as I can remember I’ve been fascinated by fungi and the transformations they provoke. As a teenager I dealt with my bafflement by finding ways to involve myself with fungi. I picked mushrooms and grew mushrooms in my bedroom. Whether in forests, labs or kitchens, fungi have changed my understanding of how life happens.”

How easy is it to grow mushrooms in your garden?

“Many species will grow in gardens without any assistance,” he says. “Some might appear on rotting logs or fence posts, or as brackets on trees. Others might sprout from lawns.

“There are a number of species that can be cultivated for those who want to play a more active role. A number of delicious mushroom species can be bought as dowel plugs and drilled into logs, including shiitake, lion’s mane and oyster mushrooms. Some, like king stropharia, can be established in wood chip beds.”

Why are they so important to the environment?

Mushrooms are only the fruiting bodies of fungi: for the most part fungi live their lives as branching, fusing networks of tubular cells known as mycelium. Mycelial networks weave themselves through plant roots and shoots, animal bodies, sulfurous sediments on the ocean floor, grasslands, and forests.

“Fungi increase the volume of water that the soil can absorb, reducing the quantity of nutrients leached out of the soil by rainfall by as much as 50%.

“Of the carbon that is found in soils – which, remarkably, amounts to twice the amount of carbon found in plants and the atmosphere combined – a substantial proportion is bound up in tough organic compounds produced by fungal mycelium. The carbon that floods into the soil through fungal channels supports intricate food webs.”

Where can you buy mushrooms to grow?

“Grow kits (available from specialists and online retailers including Amazon) are possibly the easiest way to begin. A block of fungal mycelium arrives in a bag, which you then open and spray with water. Within a few days, mushrooms start to sprout.

“You can also buy wooden dowel plugs inoculated with fungal mycelium which you then drill into logs, or bags of inoculated wood chips that you use to make a fungus bed in your garden.

“Then again, nearly all plants depend on symbiotic fungi living in their roots and shoots. What we call ‘plants’ are in fact fungi that have evolved to farm algae, and algae that have evolved to farm fungi.

“If you care about plants, you care about the fungi without which plant life would be impossible. Any plant we buy from a garden centre will come with its own community of fungi which we cultivate without giving it a further thought.”

The magic of mushrooms

“Fungi are metabolic wizards and can explore, scavenge and salvage ingeniously. Few environments are too extreme,” he points out.

“A species isolated from mining waste is one of the most radiation-resistant organisms ever discovered. The blasted nuclear reactor at Chernobyl is home to a large population of such fungi. A number of these radio-tolerant species even grow towards radioactive ‘hot’ particles, and appear to be able to harness radiation as a source of energy, as plants use the energy in sunlight.

“Some species discharge spores explosively, which accelerate 10,000 times faster than a space shuttle directly after launch, reaching speeds of up to 100km per hour – some of the quickest movements achieved by any living organism.”

Fungi facts

“Fungi produce around 50 megatonnes of spores each year – equivalent to the weight of 500,000 blue whales – making them the largest source of living particles in the air. Spores are found in clouds and influence the weather by triggering the formation of the water droplets that form rain, and ice crystals that form snow, sleet and hail.

“A number of fungal species produce bioluminescence, which causes their mushrooms and mycelium to glow in the dark. Coal miners in 19th century England reported that bioluminescent fungi growing on wooden pit props were bright enough to ‘see their hands by’.”

Entangled Life: How Fungi Make Our Worlds, Change Our Minds And Shape Our Futures by Merlin Sheldrake, published by Bodley Head, is available now in hardback, priced £20; and published in paperback by Vintage on September 2, priced £10.99.

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