🍄 The Hidden World of Fungi: Networks, Medicine, and the Wood Wide Web
In this C1-level reading lesson, students will explore the hidden world of fungi through five thematic chapters spanning ten pages. Beginning with the fundamental biology of fungi and why they are neither plant nor animal, the text moves through mycorrhizal networks and the 'Wood Wide Web' that connects forest trees, the medical revolution from penicillin to psilocybin, the critical ecological role of decomposition, and the emerging frontier of mycoremediation, fungal materials, and climate solutions. Students will encounter advanced vocabulary related to biology, ecology, medicine, and environmental science.
Lesson Plan
- Chapter I: Neither Plant Nor Animal — fungal biology, hyphae, mycelium, spores, chitin, and the kingdom Fungi
- Chapter II: The Wood Wide Web — mycorrhizal networks, nutrient exchange, mother trees, Suzanne Simard's research, and interspecies communication
- Chapter III: Medicine from the Mould — penicillin, statins, cyclosporine, psilocybin renaissance, and the untapped pharmacological potential
- Chapter IV: The Great Recyclers — decomposition, nutrient cycling, saprotrophic fungi, carbon sequestration, and what happens without decay
- Chapter V: Fungi and the Future — mycoremediation, mycelium-based materials, fungal packaging, carbon capture, and building a circular bioeconomy
Key Vocabulary
Grammar Points
- Complex participial phrases: Extending through kilometres of soil in a single hectare, mycorrhizal networks connect trees in ways that scientists are only beginning to understand.
- Inversion after negative adverbials: Not until Suzanne Simard's groundbreaking research did ecologists fully appreciate the extent of underground fungal communication.
- Mixed conditionals: Had Fleming not left his petri dish uncovered, the discovery of penicillin might have been delayed by decades.
- Advanced passive with reporting: Mycorrhizal networks have been described by ecologists as the internet of the forest floor.
- Cleft sentences: It is not the visible mushroom but the vast underground mycelium that constitutes the true body of the organism.
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