A Mushroom Mystery That Is Baffling Scientists
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- Опубліковано 8 чер 2024
- Mushrooms do some wild things. But recently, an unknown species was found fruiting on a LIVING frog- stunning scientists and bringing into question everything we know about how mushrooms grow. In this episode of the mushroom show, we try unveil the mystery of this "frog-stool", and try to determine whether or not we should be concerned. We are also announcing an exclusive and exciting partnership between a leader in functional mushrooms and a leader in nutrition retailing. Plus, we dissect the differences between fungi and mushrooms. Are they the same thing? Find out on Episode 32 of The Mushroom Show!
Enjoy! - Навчання та стиль
I've heard of magic mushrooms, and people licking toads or smoking toad stuff, but this new combo is too much 😂
I'm not, not licking toads.
- Homer Simpson
If only we could just inject scorpion venom in that toad
@@goatt6811 😜
I used to live in Costa Rica and the right kind of toads were everywhere, they even came in my house lots of times. And there were scorpions too, in the same house. I never heard of people messing with the scorpion venom but I knew a couple gringos in Pavones that invited me to smoke toad stuff. I skipped it.
Frog was getting starlink service.
😄
We were alerted to a tiny, spraying water line leak by some little shrooms growing out of the carpet. Sure glad they told us!
Contrary to what Hollywood would have us believe, mammalian immune systems are rather effective at mitigating fungal infection.
Reality is so boring. I'm trying to do the last of us irl...
For now anyway... I have heard stories recently about fungal infection on the rise.
@@CarlosGordo97 no one is stopping you! Take an immunosuppressive medicine , and inhale some spores or just lay back and wait for your own yeast to do its thing (if you’re the lazy type). Live your dream. We’re all rooting for you!
@@MermaidMakes I don't appreciate you asking me to die over this. That's not nice. I wanna fight undead fungal nightmares not die bro. That's the whole point of an apocalyptic daydream like this. The dream is to basically do a whole rick thing like that other show with zombies where they don't admit they are in fact zombies... walking dead? Idk. Have a good one anyways. If it happens and you get infected and we happen to meet, I won't feel remorse. I'm joking. Thanks for your kind words anyway.
@@CarlosGordo97 ohhhh ok. Sorry for the confusion. You’ll have to genetically engineer something for that I’m afraid. I still believe in you! It’s just going to take a little longer to earn your genetic engineering degree.
yea, that seems pretty much the answer, the frog got impaled with a piece of colonized wood.
Oh? Okay, thanks for saving me 18 mins i guess.
Right, thanks for the TL/DR
And the splinter supports it?
Oh the pain
@@YOUNOTSMARTmushrooms are like 98% water.
Thank you Tony and team. Another great episode!
The frog was sporting the first mushroom bandaid. A billion dollar idea just hopping around the forest.
Perhaps not the first. Look into Otzi the Iceman, a 5,300 year old frozen corpse discovered with a Birch Polypore in his satchel. This mushroom is famous for its anti microbial effects among many other benefits, making it a great bandaid.
I heard it was the kind of mushroom that holds an ember.. for fires. But Idk what kind it was off the top of my head.. that said it could have multiple uses.@@leftmusic7432
Amazing episode. Probably in my top 3 favorite videos from the channel. Would really love for you to make more videos on what you covered in the last segment
I get fungus problems all the time and will probably continue to up until the time I Croak !
Psilocybin x 5MeO-DMT just dropped boys !
Psilocybin mushrooms actually phosphorylate whatever tryptamine you give them. I heard of some people using RC tryptamines as a base and letting the mushrooms alter the structure
@@ganglestank
Psilocybin isn't just a phosphorylation product of a tryptamine, but phosphorylated [phosphate ester of 4-hydroxy-DMT (= Psilocin)]. So, you first have a 4-oxidation prior to the 4-O phosphate synthesis, both of which I have read can happen to tryptamines with other substituents on the Nitrogen. At least it's been done with N,N-DiEthylTryptamine (DET) added to the medium of a Psilocybe sp. Giving 4-phosphoryloxy-DET. haven't been looking for studies for the possibility of other biosynthetic Psilocybin analogues... Do you know where to find details about what DMT analogues were used, and which was giving derivatives of Psilocybin?
@@ganglestankdoes it grow on frogs
Shrooms and Bufo, sounds like a party
@@adityalenka7886 beats Testor's model glue & whippits
Love this so much! Thank you for creating the mushroom show!!!
I love this dudes content! So informative that it quickly makes me realize how little I know!
I’m gonna keep coming back!
Sooner or later, hopefully I’ll retain at least a small amount of the overwhelming plethora of info coming so fast, a little at a time, each time…..baby steps
Great episode! I learned a lot
I once saw a mushroom growing between the wall and the plastic floor cover in my parents van. It was one of those ford econoline vans and my dad would use it to haul hay in sometimes and he would wash it out with a hose. It grossed me out at the time, but now its interesting how it was able to grow with so little there.
great episode!
If I wanted a schitzophylum commune I’d hop in my Time Machine and go back to the 60s!
if you have a time machine then you should go back in time and kill hitler. 😅
Yer getting shredded homie. Keep it up!
Absolute facts! Dude needs some bigger shirts now hahaha
good stuff, thanks
When I was studying Hylidae we were always on the lookout for chytrid fungus. Herpetologists for years have been standing by helplessly as it decimates entire species. One thing I did not hear was the fact that other fungus like that might also be a potential threat. I’m sure people have speculated, but it was essentially buried under the more pressing concern about chytrid. Really neat, albeit concerning. Thank you for the video!
Great video!
Thank you for the information.
1:50 That's a Pokemon
A very interesting episode indeed! Are Smuts perhaps the type that is growing on old garlic?
Great presentation.
Greate video bro I appreciate it now I can actually send people videos so they have a better understanding of what I'm trying to explain
Thanks😊 there is so much to learn with mushrooms
hi, can you do an episode about "sometimes edible/sometimes not edible" mushrooms? thanks!!!
Tony, the Chinese Boletus species you mentioned last summer that is having hallucinogenic properties I have forgotten the name of, but the related psychoactive Boletus in Europe and the USA, is mainly "Neoboletus luridiformis". It's a bit hard for the digestion, but it will not be hallucinogenic except for eating it almost raw, unfortunately .
can you grow it on one of those lickable toads?
🐸🍄🍄🍄
Not very surprising since they bruise blue indicating a high concentration of indole compounds. The blue is from indigo dye being formed by oxidation of this.❤
At first I was afraid it was a Cordyceps mushroom. Beware the Zombie Frogs! There was that guy who had a pine tree growing in his lung, so you just never know.
The idea of the frog having a splinter, which the mushroom is growing on is an interesting possibility.
What about GNC's in Canada or do you package in the US?
So good 2 learn
Great episode. Congrats to FreshCap!
I'm listening and learning doc
...aaand it begins
interesting that you mentioned corn smut, the last few years i have been trying to grow corn, got soem corn smut on accident, now ive been trying to figure out how to grow more of it too.
i've seen that mushroom grow on trees, i actually saw it some months ago+last year, it was such a unique find
I pronounce it fun-guy because it's easier to make puns that way.
Interesting. Mushrooms have amazing possibilities.
I can't remember the species that do it but some frogs produce "frog milk" to feed their tadpoles, which consists of lipids they excrete through their skin, which is then grazed on from their bodies by their tadpoles.
So frog skin at the right time of the year could provide nutrients for mycelium.
Where do mushrooms grow? YES!
I started seeing a chick and her bedroom bay window frames were completely covered in a red-brown bracket mushroom. It looked like rippled leather with some gill ridges here and there, almost flat. She thought it was old paint. Whole thing was alive and damp from the window leaking.
O😮 that's so intressing
10:53 i thought achaea was a kingdom
I was under the impression it’s still a highly debated topic
“Mushrooms cannot grow on people” every Mycologist in the Last of Us
👁👁👁 good stuff my brother
When Google thinks I'm saying fun guy
Psilocybin can grow inside of people? Where can I get an instruction manual?
There was one example where a guy injected mushroom tea and the spores infected his blood
@@ganglestank
Would not recommend though. The guy almost died of multiple organ failure.
Do you know if children can safely take your mushroom supplements? Maybe at half the dosage? Thanks!
This mofo super glued a shroom to a dang frog
you should review dorohedoro
There's a fun guy if ever I saw one.
That would be scary
Mushrooms colonizing animals
Of all the pictures you showed of those frogs, they all had little white dots on them, I wonder if they just have a symbiotic relationship with that fungus that protects them from another type of fungal infection?!?
I think they would have noticed if they all had white dots did you think you solved it by looking at a picture for 3 seconds when these people actually went out and took the photos 😂😂
Do you know how to extract enoki mushrooms?
Isn't the 5 kingdom division kinda old by now? Bew evidence supports many more kingdoms especially at the monocellular level
Weird semi related question I've had tumbling around in my knoggin' for a while now but I've wondered if in a survival situation, if someone stumbled across signs of old mushroom colonisation, could they get significant calories from the medium rather than any fruiting bodies? I thought about this after coming across some dried up puffballs almost 6 months after they typically fruit and I've definitely felt that some types of forest floor were delicious to the senses and even probably edible. I get that we can never really tell whether dirt is safe to eat cause there could be all kinds of things in there but in a survival situation it'd probably be worth it and since the fruiting body is tiny, we'd probably get a lot more calories proportionally to simply finding mushrooms, assuming we didn't mind slowly eating kilo's of dirt or shaved wood or whatever.
Fun-guy! lol 🤣
Often wondered why Fungi haven't occupied this ecological niche before this.
Using Animals as a natural resource.
There are of course instances in the invertebrates that become infected with a parasitic mushroom, (ants come to mind) but imagine that certain Fungi have crossed the barrier and can infect animals. Truly a thing of nightmares.
Probably some government psychos working on it.
Have they covered how animalia is now a branch of fungi?
great video bro 🤗💗💙🙌 I would further add that even "bad" molds not utilized in foods or production of medicines, are very "good" perhaps by ecological perspective, in that they serve niche functions in breaking down organic constructs. Mushrooms are freaky, and certainly have much to do with "death" and the recycling of structures back into usable components, or even novel, useful compounds. The paradox is though, that apparently there is great awareness of and affection for, the sensitivity of sentient beings and animals around this threshold of life/death, and every effort and providence of just updating organisms into perpetuity, rather than letting them die, is extended by our fungal kingdom.... i.e. God knows how expensive gestation is, and is very much in favor of supporting beings into an eternal symbiosis, from where our beneficial output and affect on our ecology far overwhelms any cost our growth has incurred.... Fractal geometry is the fungal intelligence trying to instill patterns in our minds that are crucial to this structure/architecture that life needs... like the microporosity of coconut coir. Beginning with Swiss Cheese, and then run that behavior to infinity, carving out holes, between the holes, between the holes (and really tunnels not holes so its all connected and accessible). That approaching of infinite complexity, alternation between solid and empty, is the structure that can wick moisture throughout itself, whilst maintaining open airways. This sweet zone of co-presence of air and water is what mycelium needs. All aerobic soil microbial ecology, evolved in the wake of fungi terraforming this planet, and thrive i those same microporous wet-but-breathable conditions. We as gardeners, can amplify and catalyze these organic potentials by bringing together the materials into mixtures, far more than what would passively fall together in nature... Then there is a whole context of medicinal plants also, which I will call the pharmacopoeia of Eden (though our Eden and other religious mythologies are frought with conflicting interpretations at this point lol). Medicinal plants that are meant for us, and without which we are more easily compromised and even relatively dysfunctional. Problem is, the greatest medicinal plants have incurred the greatest slander and stigmatization. The users of these plants are judged as merely seeking pleasure, and thus deserving their own demise when without their medicine. The plant that has had my attention the most in the last few years is the infamous "opium poppy". I cannot stress with enough earnest urgency, that we need to re-examine, through direct experience, the place some of these plants may have in our lives, and I would suggest that our estrangement from them, plays into the advantage of forces who do not desire our wellness, coherence, or empowerment.
Got a good flush of ink caps from my bathroom rug last year.
I blame Euglenids.
Today I checked my bag and was so happy to see almost all white❤ the pf Tek i bought was kinda green on the flash camera. But I'm even more happy because the bag was literally things i was throwing in the garbage 😂
Thanks for all the information you provided
The real question is why aren't morels mushrooms...
I'm totally fine with him saying "funjy" but we really have to address "amōba".
Lol thinking about when my grandma told me not to swallow watermelon seeds because they will grow in your stomach
GNC is not a leading nutrition retailer. They are leading snake oil sales outfit.
11:32 "Seeking Enzymes" 😂 No form of Life seeks for Enzymes
Morgellons frog version
Greetings fellow mushroom lovers!! I'm looking to grow mushrooms, but I want to do it naturally, and without grain based substrate. Any advice with this would be incredibly helpful...have a beautiful day.
how is this so different than foot fungus?
My understanding is that the Cordyceps that infects the "zombie" ants fruits on the ants while they are living.
Probably last act of life is climbing up it's post. Once it's fruiting, most of the ant is used up.
❤
What if we all have one and it’s just makes us not know we all infected and we only die cause of it
That's a wrong lohit YT picture... Lohit is not the one in pic... I wonder where u got this image from
At 3:46, the Wikipedia article for Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis gives this pronunciation:
bəˌtreɪkoʊˈkɪtriəm ˈdɛndroʊbətaɪdɪs
- or -
bə-TRAY-koh-KIT-ree-əm DEN-droh-bə-ty-dis
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Batrachochytrium_dendrobatidis
You can appreciate the hyphae in a KOH slide of foot skin.
Ooh I’m gonna try this
Last of US in real life
So, its a fungal Venusaur variant?
Mushrooms grow
where animals poop and pee.
Frogs have warts / Fungi 🤔
Have you ever thought about how fungus came into being, just kind of out of the blue? They are so unlike anything else on this planet that I think they came from somewhere else.
We literally all came from the same place, We share DNA with mushrooms and have a common ancestor.
Maybe our AI overlords will crack the code and figure out mushroom behavior
The poor pepe got stung by a inoculated wood splinter.
No need to freak out.
Please let me know when I can buy functional mushroom blends in a 5 gallon bucket. the sheer quantity I would need to legitimately fuel my family would cost more than rent at retail rates. until then... I guess mushroom health lies outside of my grasp.
I take lichens that I find outside and put them in terrariums that I make
Ummm, this is how the last of us starts
Ellie!!?
I would guess the mushroom got stuck to the frog either by accident or put there by the people who found it. if you look at the picture you can see some dirt or something brown where the mushroom is coming out of, it doesn't look like it grew out of the frog. it looks like something is stuck to the frogs slime
No flow hood or pressure cooker and rarely have contam.
You have fungus growing on your skin RIGHT NOW, most commonly : Candida
A Russian man once grew a spruce tree in his chest
Is that really a mycena? Looks more like a coprinellus to me
Zombie ant's fungus that makes control ants while eating them!
NOT YET..
😂
So... You've heard of the split-gill fruiting on the soft pallet of an immunocompromised human, right?...
There are pictures! Can't find them? Talk to a university professor (such as Tom Volk, whom I learned this from) specializing in medical mycology.
My point is that this is not the only fruiting mushroom body recorded on a living creature... Hell, this is a step above! It's on a human!!!
I hope you and others find this information interesting. ✌️
The real question is.. when are you starting to ship to europe too...
What's that Pokémon?
Lol
The frog is infested with mycelium!! Zombie frog he's dead and don't even know it!!!