We Owe Our Existence to Fungi
- Fungal proliferation before and after the Cretaceous-Paleogene mass extinction in North America
Abstract: Palynological evidence of post-catastrophe fungal proliferation after global calamities has been found for the Permian-Triassic and Cretaceous-Paleogene (K/Pg) extinction events. However, unlike the globally documented post-Permian fungal bloom, evidence of a post-Cretaceous event has previously been limited to a single site in New Zealand. Our analysis of a K/Pg boundary section from the Denver Basin in Colorado revealed a fungal proliferative spike occurring immediately after the Chicxulub impact. The discovery of a post-impact fungal bloom in North America corroborates the New Zealand finding and supports the interpretation that this was a global phenomenon. We also identified a prolonged interval of elevated fungal abundance in the Late Cretaceous, dating to approximately 30,000-10,000 years before the impact, temporally correlated to a period of climatic cooling at the site and intriguingly coincident with the Poladpur phase of the Deccan Traps. Taken together with reports of fungal expansion following prior global calamities, these findings indicate that fungi can often flourish in the aftermath of ecosystem-level collapse. Given the capacity of fungi to cause disease in both plants and animals, the occurrence of fungal proliferative events has major potential implications for the recovery of surviving species after global cataclysms.
That fungi proliferate after a global catastrophe like the Chicxulub impact makes a ton of sense to me. This wonderful paper presents excellent evidence which supports this sense notion. It is likely that fungi feeding off of massive amounts of dead organic matter provided a sort of food chain base which permitted some animal and plant groups to survive the deleterious aftereffects of the Chicxulub impact.
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Author: Flower Snark
Email: flowersnark@gmail.com
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Copyright © 2026 Flower Snark
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