Updated
Updated · The Brighter Side of News · May 29
Oregon Researchers Map 9.65-Sq-Km Fungus, the World's Largest Individual Organism
Updated
Updated · The Brighter Side of News · May 29

Oregon Researchers Map 9.65-Sq-Km Fungus, the World's Largest Individual Organism

2 articles · Updated · The Brighter Side of News · May 29
  • Armillaria ostoyae beneath Oregon’s Blue Mountains spans about 9.65 square kilometers—roughly 965 hectares or 1,600 football fields—making it the largest known individual fungus ever mapped.
  • Researchers linked scattered tree-kill patches to one genet by pairing fungal samples from infected trees and testing whether they fused as self rather than formed boundaries as separate individuals.
  • The fungus is estimated to be at least 1,900 years old and possibly 8,650, showing visible forest damage can mark only fragments of a much larger underground organism.
  • That age also undercuts a long-held management view that modern fire suppression created the disease; the study says fire may shape where damage appears, but did not naturally control the fungus.
  • For forest managers, the findings recast Armillaria root disease as a long-standing ecological force, suggesting species selection may matter more than trying to eliminate ancient fungal territories.
As scientists reveal this fungus's secrets, how will new strategies manage this ancient, deep-rooted forest force?
This giant organism behaves intelligently without a brain. What does this reveal about the hidden nature of life itself?