The Dirt on Black-Market Plants ■ 295
white truffles cannot be cultivated in greenhouses
as other fungi can.
There’s danger in the forests too. Truffle hunt-
ers use dogs and pigs to sniff out wild truffles
(Fig ure 16.10), and some have reported compet-
itors planting spiked traps or poisoned meat-
balls in forests to eliminate trained dogs. Other
hounds have been stolen from their owners,
never to be seen again.
That’s a lot of drama for some fungi. Most
fungi are multicellular, but there are some single-
celled species collectively known as yeasts. Many
of us are familiar with yeasts thanks to two
important products they produce: alcohol and
carbon dioxide, crucial to the rising of bread, the
brewing of beer, and the fermenting of wine.
Fungi’s key evolutionary innovation is their
body form, which is well suited for absorptive
heterotrophy (Figure 16.11). They are made up
of a network of fine, colorless, branching, hair-
like threads called hyphae (singular “hypha”),
which absorb nutrients from the environment.
The entire bundle of hyphae, composing the
main body of the fungus, is called the mycelium
(plural “mycelia”).
Because of this unique body form, many fungi
are decomposers and consume nonliving organic
material. As they eat, these fungi release back
into the environment inorganic chemicals that
had previously been trapped in the bodies of
dead organisms. Once these chemicals are back
in the environment, plants and algae scoop them
up and use them to manufacture food. Fungi
interact with plants in other important ways too:
the vast majority of wild plants have mutualistic
fungi in their root systems that help the plants
The mycelium is the
bundle of hyphae that
make up an individual
fungus.
The fruiting body
of the fungus is what
we informally call
a “mushroom.”
Spores are the
reproductive
structures of
the fungus.
A hypha is a
single fungal
thread.
Figure 16.11
A fungus lives both belowground
and aboveground
The main body of a fungus is unseen, belowground. To reproduce,
the fungus generates a fruiting body that is usually aboveground and
releases spores. Spores travel by wind and develop into new fungi.
Q1: Why is it important that the fruiting body is aboveground?
Q2: What part of a fungus is the mushroom that you can buy in the
grocery store?
Q3: Write a sentence in your own words that uses the terms
“mycelium,” “fruiting body,” and “spore” correctly.
Figure 16.10
A truffle hunter and his dog search for a
fungus beloved by gourmets
While farmers continue attempts to grow truffles
commercially, their success has been limited. For
now, we must rely on truffle hunters and their
dogs (or pigs, which can also be trained to sniff
out truffles) for this fungal delicacy.