The fungus is called Armillaria ostoyae, but is more popularly known as the "honey mushroom". This particular specimen is calculated to be about 2,400 years old, although it could be two to three times this age.
"This fungus lives in a below-ground habitat, spreading very slowly outward from tree to tree along roots or by growth through the soil using special shoestring-like structures called rhizomorphs," said Dr Catherine Parks, from the US Department of Agriculture Forest Service's Pacific Northwest Research Station. "The fungus is visible in the clusters of golden-coloured mushrooms occasionally seen in the fall on the forest floor that represent just the tip of the iceberg in regard to its true size and impact upon the forest."
Until now, the largest known organism was another Armillaria ostoyae found infecting ponderosa pine in eastern Washington State in 1992. It covered 600 hectares (1,500 acres) near Mount Adams.
Co-researcher Dr Tina Dreisbach said lab studies had shown the fungus to be a single individual. "We took hundreds of samples and compared them to each other in the culture plate," she told the BBC. "If they grow together in the culture plate they are determined to be the same individual; if they form a gap between each other or ignore each other, they are determined to be different individuals. And we had hundreds of these pairings that showed this was indeed one huge individual."
The huge size of this fungus may be related to the dry climate in eastern Oregon, Dr Dreisbach said. Spores have a hard time establishing new organisms, making room for the old-timers to spread. To minimise tree mortality near the fungus, forest managers looking to protect their timber production will plant less susceptible tree species such as western larch and ponderosa pine, and harvest susceptible hosts such as Douglas fir and true fir during thinning.
Editor's Note: the above article first appeared in the Sci/Tech section of BBC News Online for Monday, 7 August 2000. To view the original story in its entirety, please click here. This material is presented here strictly by way of entertainment. No infringement of copyright is either implied nor intended by this editor through this presentation.
This Page Created 12 August 2000
This page revised 28 August 2007