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« News Flash! | Main | The Limitations of LB Medium »

November 05, 2009

Comments

Karl Wooldridge

Surely after a mass extinction the large amount of dead animal and plant material would be around for only the blink of an eye in geologial terms, and so would be unlikely to be a significant new food source or niche?

Elio replies:
You are right about the short duration of the corpses and detritus, but they could have supported a huge population of the fungi at the time. If these particular fungi were especially adept at becoming fossilized, one would expect them to be found in large amounts and constitute a record of what happened in the "blink of the eye".

cavemanog.livejournal.com

Looking at these photomicrographs, one could scarcely imagine that the fossil chains of Reduviasporonites were anything BUT conidiophores and conidia. That could just be my personal bias talking. When I'm at the microscope, there's typically a fungus under it.

Manuel Sanchez

Great history!

Now we have, the Trilobites Age, the Ammonites Age, the Dinosaurs Age and the Fungi Age.

Regards

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