Scoopfeeds — Intelligent news, curated.
Threads of underground fungal networks are long enough to reach beyond the Solar System
computer-science

Threads of underground fungal networks are long enough to reach beyond the Solar System

Ars Technica · Jun 13, 2026, 11:18 AM

Hidden underground around the world lie 110 quadrillion kilometers of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal networks—webs of ultra-thin threads that, if connected in a single line, would stretch almost a billion times the distance between the Earth and the sun, according to new research published in Science on Thursday. These fungal communities form intimate relationships with the roots of plants, which they provide with nutrients like phosphorus and nitrogen in exchange for carbon, 1 billion tons of which the networks sequester underground annually, previous research has found. If the fungal network wasn’t storing it, that carbon would be warming the atmosphere. But those networks have never been mapped globally until now. The new study led by Society for the Protection of Underground Networks, or SPUN, an organization founded to map mycorrhizal fungi networks, used a combination of literature review, soil samples from around the globe, machine learning and laboratory testing to estimate the distribution and mass of these systems and map where they are densest.Read full article Comments

Article preview — originally published by Ars Technica. Full story at the source.
Read full story on Ars Technica → More top stories
Aggregated and edited by the Scoop newsroom. We surface news from Ars Technica alongside other reporting so you can compare coverage in one place. Editorial policy · Corrections · About Scoop