| A short summary |
In an undisturbed
forest, the top layer of the forest soil is rich with nutrients that come from rotting
organic materials. Dead leaves, trees and feces that is on the forest floor needs to be
broken down and their nutrients returned to the soil, and the cycle repeats, with the
plants taking back these nutrients. Found anywhere in moist damp areas, fungi break down
dead matter into useful nutrient.
Parasitic fungi attack living plants and animals and they cause diseases. |

A bracket fungus on a wooden stump

A bird nest fungi (bigger version)

Many of the brighter coloured fungi and
toadstools are poisonous. (bigger version)
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Many people probably think that
rainforest soil is extremely rich, for it is able to support wide varieties of plants and
tree species. That is a misconception, because majorities of rainforest soil are very poor
in nutrients and is unsuitable for normal agriculture. Where then do these trees get their
nutrients? In an undisturbed forest, the top layer of the forest soil is rich with
nutrients that come from rotting organic materials. Since the tropical rainforest is
evergreen, there is always a supply of rotting dead leaves covering the forest floor. All
the tree species in the rainforest have shallow roots, which is aimed to absorb back the
nutrients at the topsoil immediately before it reached the deeper parts of the soil.
Thus the nutrient cycle is a very important cycle and it
forms the very base of all food webs. Dead leaves, trees and feces that is on the forest
floor needs to be broken down and their nutrients returned to the soil, and the cycle
repeats, with the plants taking back these nutrients. Main decomposing agents are the
fungi and bacteria. Found anywhere in moist damp areas, these group of species break down
dead matter into useful nutrient.
Fungi are actually made up of a network
of fibres called hyphae, and that structure we usually see that sometimes look like
umbrellas are their reproductive organs. These "umbrellas" come in great
varieties of colours and shapes. They have no chlorophyll and so they must obtain their
food from living or dead plants and animals. There are basically two types of fungi, the
parasitic and the saprophytic. Parasitic fungi attack living plants and animals and they
cause diseases. The decomposers which we are familiar to, falls under the saprophytic
fungi, they live off dead plants and animal material.
Bird nest
fungi
The bird nest fungi is definitely one of those weird ones. It
is shaped like little urns and when young has a protective lid covering it. When the fungi
has mature, the lid is shed and round, hard sacs that looks like bird eggs are exposed.
Each of these small white sacs contained millions of spores and when a raindrop falls into
the cup, one or more of these sacs are popped out and they travel several feet from their
nest. As these sacs float in the air, they leave behind a trail of sticky
thread. When the tread make contact with a leaf or some other parts of a plant, it clings
on and these sacs will be left suspended. The aim of this is so that when an animal walks
pass and starts eating the leaves of the plant, it may accidentally consume the sac. The
sac, which is unharmed through the digestive tract, will then be passed through and
deposited elsewhere.
Bracket fungi
The bracket fungus is probably the most familiar and commonly
seen fungi. They are usually semi circular in shape and can be found protruding from dead
wood or tree stumps. They are very large fungi and can even grow up to 1 metes in width!
They help to decompose the wood they sit from. Unlike other mushrooms, bracket fungus have
pores on their underside instead of gills.
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