"From Ted
Lasso to TED Talks, the theory of the “wood-wide web” is everywhere, and some
scientists argue that it is overblown and unproven.
Justine Karst, a
mycologist at the University of Alberta, feared things had gone too far when
her son got home from eighth grade and told her he had learned that trees could
talk to each other through underground networks.
Her colleague,
Jason Hoeksema of the University of Mississippi, had a similar feeling when
watching an episode of “Ted Lasso” in which one soccer coach told another that
trees in a forest cooperated rather than competed for resources.
Few recent
scientific discoveries have captured the public’s imagination quite like the
wood-wide web — a wispy network of fungal filaments hypothesized to shuttle
nutrients and information through the soil and to help forests thrive. The idea
sprouted in the late 1990s from studies showing that sugars and nutrients can
flow underground between trees. In a few forests, researchers have traced fungi
from the roots of one tree to those of others, suggesting that mycelial threads
could be providing conduits between trees.
These findings
have challenged the conventional view of forests as a mere population of trees:
Trees and fungi are, in fact, coequal players on the ecological stage,
scientists say. Without both, forests as we know them wouldn’t exist.
Scientists and
nonscientists alike have drawn grand and sweeping conclusions from this
research. They have posited that shared fungal networks are ubiquitous in
forests around the world, that they help trees talk to each other and, as “Ted
Lasso’s” Coach Beard articulated, that they make forests fundamentally
cooperative places, with trees and fungi united in common purpose — a dramatic
departure from the usual Darwinian picture of interspecies competition.
The concept has
been featured in numerous media reports, TV shows and best-selling books,
including a Pulitzer Prize winner. It even shows up in “Avatar,” the
highest-grossing movie of all time.
And the theory
could be starting to influence what happens in real forests. Some scientists, for
example, have suggested managing forests explicitly to protect fungal networks.
But as the
wood-wide web has gained fame, it has also inspired a backlash among
scientists. In a recent review of published research, Dr. Karst, Dr. Hoeksema
and Melanie Jones, a biologist at the University of British Columbia, Okanagan,
found little evidence that shared fungal networks help trees to communicate,
swap resources or thrive. Indeed, the trio said, scientists have yet to show
that these webs are widespread or ecologically significant in forests.
For some of their
peers, such a reality check is long overdue. “I think this is a very timely
talk,” said Kabir Peay, a mycologist at Stanford University, about a
presentation Dr. Karst recently gave. He hoped it could “reorient the field.”
Others, however,
maintain that the wood-wide web is on firm ground and are confident that
further research will confirm many of the hypotheses proffered about fungi in
forests. Colin Averill, a mycologist at ETH Zurich, said that the evidence Dr.
Karst marshaled is impressive. But, he added, “the way I interpret the totality
of that evidence is completely different.”
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Most plant roots
are colonized by mycorrhizal fungi, forming one of Earth’s most widespread
symbioses. The fungi gather water and nutrients from the soil; they then swap
some of these treasures with plants in exchange for sugars and other
carbon-containing molecules.
David Read, a
botanist then at the University of Sheffield, showed in a 1984 paper that
compounds labeled with a radioactive form of carbon could flow via fungi
between lab-grown plants.
Years later,
Suzanne Simard, then an ecologist with the British Columbia Ministry of
Forests, demonstrated two-way carbon transfer in a forest between young Douglas
fir and paper birch trees. When Dr. Simard and her colleagues shaded Douglas
firs to reduce how much they photosynthesized, the trees’ absorption of
radioactive carbon spiked, suggesting that underground carbon flow could boost
young trees’ growth in the shady understory.
Dr. Simard and
colleagues published their results in 1997 in the journal Nature, which
splashed it on the cover and christened the discovery the “wood-wide web.” Soon
after, a group of senior researchers criticized the study, saying it had
methodological flaws that confounded the results. Dr. Simard responded to the
critiques, and she and her colleagues designed additional studies to address
them.
Over time, the
criticisms faded, and the wood-wide web gained adherents. Dr. Simard’s 1997
paper has garnered almost 1,000 citations and her 2016 TED Talk, “How trees
talk to each other,” has been viewed more than 5 million times.
https://www.ted.com/talks/suzanne_ simard_how_trees_talk_to_each_other?language=en
In his book “The
Hidden Life of Trees,” which has sold more than 2 million copies, Peter
Wohlleben, a German forester, cited Dr. Simard when describing forests as
social networks and mycorrhizal fungi as “fiber-optic internet cables” that
help trees inform each other about dangers such as insects and drought.
Subterranean
forest research has continued to grow, too. In 2016, Tamir Klein, a plant
ecophysiologist then at the University of Basel and now at the Weizmann
Institute of Science in Israel, extended Dr. Simard’s research into a mature
Swiss forest of spruce, pine, larch and beech trees.
His team tracked
carbon isotopes from one tree to the roots of other nearby trees, including
different species, in an experimental forest plot.
The researchers
attributed most of the carbon movement to mycorrhizal fungi but acknowledged
they had not proven it.
Dr. Simard, who
has been at the University of British Columbia since 2002, has led further
studies showing that large, old “mother” trees are hubs of forest networks and
can send carbon underground to younger seedlings. She has argued in favor of
the view that trees communicate via mycorrhizal networks and against a
long-held idea that competition between trees is the dominant force shaping forests.
In her TED Talk, she called trees “super-cooperators.”
But as the
wood-wide web’s popularity has soared both inside and outside scientific
circles, a skeptical reaction has evolved. Last year, Kathryn Flinn, an
ecologist at Baldwin Wallace University in Ohio, argued in Scientific American
that Dr. Simard and others had exaggerated the degree of cooperation among
trees in forests. Most experts, Dr. Flinn wrote, believe that groups of
organisms whose members sacrifice their own interests on behalf of the
community rarely evolve, a result of the powerful force of natural selection
among competing individuals.
Instead, she
suspects, fungi most likely distribute carbon according to their own interests,
not those of trees. “That, to me, seems like the simplest explanation,” she
said in an interview.
Even some who once
promoted the idea of shared fungal networks are rethinking the hypothesis. Dr.
Jones, one of Dr. Simard’s co-authors in 1997, says she regrets that she and
her colleagues wrote in the paper that they had evidence for fungal connections
between trees. In fact, Dr. Jones says, they did not examine whether fungi
mediated the carbon flows.
For their recent
literature review, Dr. Karst, Dr. Hoeksema and Dr. Jones rounded up all the
studies they could find that made claims about either the structure or the
function of such underground fungal networks. The researchers focused on field
studies in forests, not lab or greenhouse experiments.
In an August
presentation based on the review at the International Mycorrhiza Society
conference in Beijing, Dr. Karst argued that much of the evidence used to
support the wood-wide web hypothesis could have other explanations. For
example, in many papers, scientists assumed that if they found a particular
fungus on multiple tree roots or that resources moved between trees the trees
must be directly linked. But few studies ruled out alternate possibilities, for
instance that resources could travel part of the way through the soil.
Some experimenters,
including Dr. Karst and her colleagues, have installed fine meshes and have
sometimes added trenches or air gaps between seedlings to disrupt hypothesized
fungal networks and then tested whether those changes altered growth. But those
tactics also reduce how much soil a seedling can directly gather nutrients or
water from, or they alter the mix of fungi growing inside the meshes, making it
difficult to isolate the effect of a fungal network, Dr. Karst said.
The researchers
also found a growing number of unsupported statements in the scientific
literature about fungal networks connecting and helping trees. Frequently,
papers such as Dr. Klein’s are cited by others as providing proof of networks
in forests, Dr. Karst and colleagues found, with caveats that appeared in the
original work left out of the newer studies.
“Scientists,” Dr.
Karst concluded in her presentation, “have become vectors for unsubstantiated
claims.” Several recent papers, she notes, have called for changes in how
forests are managed, based on the wood-wide web concept.
Dr. Karst said,
“it’s highly likely” that shared fungal networks do exist in forests. In a 2012
study, Dr. Simard’s team found identical fungal DNA on the roots of nearby
Douglas fir trees. The researchers then sampled soil between the trees in thin
slices and found the same repeating DNA segments known as “microsatellites” in
each slice, confirming that the fungus bridged the gap between the roots. But
that study did not examine what resources, if any, were flowing through the
network, and few other scientists have mapped fungal networks with such rigor.
Even if intertree
fungal networks exist, however, Dr. Karst and her colleagues say common claims
about those networks don’t hold up. For example, in many studies, the putative
networks appeared to either hinder tree growth or to have no effect. No one has
demonstrated that fungi distribute meaningful amounts of resources among trees
in ways that increase the fitness of the receiving trees, Dr. Hoeksema said.
Yet nearly all discussions of the wood-wide web, scientific or popular, have
described it as benefiting trees.
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Others, however,
remain convinced that time will vindicate the wood-wide web.
While how
ubiquitous shared fungal networks are and how important they are to tree growth
remain open questions, Dr. Averill of ETH Zurich said the title of Dr. Karst’s
presentation — “The decay of the wood-wide web?” — incorrectly suggests that
the very concept is faulty. Instead, he hopes scientists will build on the
tantalizing clues gathered so far by looking for networks in more forests.
Indeed, members of Dr. Karst’s team have generated what Dr. Averill considers
some of the most compelling evidence for the wood-wide web.
“It’s very clear
that in some forests in some places, different trees are absolutely connected
by fungi,” he said.
Dr. Klein of the
Weizmann Institute said his team has placed its speculation about a network on
firmer ground by using DNA sequences to map fungi in a 2020 follow-up study of
the same Swiss forest and a 2022 lab study using forest soil. (Dr. Karst and
her colleagues said that in their view, even those studies did not truly map
fungal networks in a forest.)
And while Dr.
Klein agrees that scientists still need to improve their understanding of why
trees and fungi are moving all that carbon around, he is more optimistic than
the Karst team that some of the bolder claims will be born out.
“If you ask me if
in the future, we will be showing that trees actually can communicate, I would
not be surprised,” he said.”
Dr. Simard agreed
that few real-world fungal networks have been mapped using DNA microsatellites
because of the difficulty in doing such studies. Kevin Beiler, the graduate
student who led the field work for the 2012 study with Dr. Simard, “spent five
years of his life mapping out these networks,” Dr. Simard said. “It’s very time
consuming.”
In spite of those
challenges, she said, studies published on other forests using other methods
have convinced her that shared fungal networks are common.
“The field of
mycorrhizal networks has been sort of plagued by having to keep going back and
redoing these experiments,” Dr. Simard said. “At some point you have to move to
the next step.”
Comprehensive
field studies of the type Dr. Hoeksema seeks would be a heavy lift for most university
scientists working on typical grant timelines, Dr. Simard said. “None of these
studies can do everything all at once, especially when you’re working with
graduate students,” she said. “You have to piece it together.”
And while Dr.
Simard has for years called for forest managers to consider her findings, she
said she was not aware of any forest being managed solely on behalf of fungal
networks. Neither was Mr. Wohlleben.
The new critique
is the latest flare-up in a decades-old debate about the role of fungi in
forest ecosystems, said Merlin Sheldrake, an independent mycologist whose book
“Entangled Life” was referenced in the “Ted Lasso” episode that alarmed Dr.
Hoeksema. Scientists have long struggled to interpret intriguing but fragmentary
shreds of evidence from the invisible underground realm.
Since Dr. Karst
gave her talk, she, Dr. Hoeksema and Dr. Jones have submitted a paper to a
peer-reviewed journal. And lest you worry that a less webby woods could feel a
tad drab, the researchers maintain that there’s plenty of intrigue even if it
turns out that trees aren’t whispering secrets to each other via subterranean
fungal channels.
“The true story is
very interesting without this narrative put on it,” Dr. Karst said. The forest
“is still a very mysterious and wonderful place.”"
Darwin
developed his theory based on Malthus's idea that there are too many people in
the world and we will soon die of starvation - natural selection will take
place. Malthus was wrong. Human ingenuity and ability to cooperate not only
saves us from hunger, but also makes our life more and more interesting. Darwin
was also wrong. The cooperation of the trees, not the stupid fight of all the
trees against all, saves the forests.
Since the
opponents of the cooperative theory of trees are ideologically driven, their
view will disappear only when they all die out. Thank you, Great Natural
Selection...
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