Certain fungi have replaced photosynthesis with a process that uses radiation and melanin instead of sunlight and chlorophyll.
Here's a possible solution to both the energy crisis and what to do with highly radioactive waste from nuclear reactors: use the radiation as food. It sounds like something out of a comic book, although scientists already know that fungi will eat asbestos, jet fuel, and plastic. It has also been shown to decompose hot graphite in the ruins of the Chernobyl power plant, which melted down in 1986. The plant's release of large amounts of radiation appears to have attracted black hordes of fungi. But how does it work?
According to Ekaterina Dadachova and her colleagues at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, in New York City, the fungi Cryptococcus neoformans and two other species use melanin, also a pigment found in human skin, to transform radiation into energy to use as food for growth. Researchers believe that melanin is present to protect fungi from stress, such as radiation, and that certain species use this molecule for metabolic reactions. [...]
Dadachova tells me in an e-mail that the most amazing aspect of the finding is that this process is an alternative to photosynthesis, "with melanin playing the role of chlorophyll and ionizing radiation; the role of visible light." Melanin converts the energy from the radiation into chemical energy used by the fungi, she says. [...]
The uses of this discovery could range from a disposal method for nuclear waste to a food source for long space voyages during which fungi could grow using radiation from outer space, although future astronauts may not find fungi very appetizing. Dadachova suggests that the fungi might be used as a biofuel to be grown in high-altitude regions where radiation is prevalent and nothing else can grow.
"uses of this discovery could range from a disposal method for nuclear waste"
Extremely interesting, but the fungi couldn't so much dispose of the waste as allow some secondary energy capture from it, assuming it's worth the expense of making enormous containment vessels and occasionally harvesting the mushrooms.
Posted by: TokyoTom at May 30, 2007 11:27 AMI for one welcome our new radiation-eating overlords.
Posted by: M/tch M/lls at May 30, 2007 03:02 PMFascinating stuff, although it seems like there would be a second law issue with generating much useful energy from it.
Posted by: Cangrejero at May 30, 2007 04:42 PMThat would suck if you got your super powers from eating a radioactive mushroom instead of getting bitten from a radioactive spider. I mean, really, what powers could a mushroom give you?
Posted by: Gaijin Biker at May 30, 2007 09:41 PM#4: Let's ask Carlos Castaņeda!
#2: We're certainly going to have overlords sooner or later, as the growing amount of human biomass makes us perfect targets for hungry an opportunistic little things. I vote for viruses, as they evolve much more nimbly that fungi.
Posted by: TokyoTom at May 31, 2007 03:08 AM4: "I may be part mushroom, Joker, but there's some shit I won't take!"
Posted by: ajay at May 31, 2007 12:39 PM