Funguses have caused some of the greatest human tragedies in history – but they have also been behind some of the greatest scientific discoveries. This list looks at ten significant funguses. Some have helped man, some have hindered man, and some are just plain awesome. If you wish to add to the list, be sure to do so in the comments. Note: Funguses and fungi are both equally valid plural forms of the word “fungus”. If you wish to see the fact verified, go here.
Incredible Because: It makes you dance, it makes your legs drop off, and is the source of LSD
Claviceps purpurea is a fungus that grows on the ears of rye and related cereal and forage plants. Consumption of grains or seeds contaminated with the fruiting structure of this fungus, the ergot sclerotium, can cause ergotism in humans and other mammals. The common name for ergotism is “St. Anthony’s Fire”, in reference to monks who cared for victims as well as symptoms, such as severe burning sensations in the limbs. These are caused by effects of ergot alkaloids on the vascular system due to constriction of blood vessels, sometimes leading to gangrene and loss of limbs due to severely restricted blood circulation. The convulsive symptoms that can be a result of consuming ergot tainted rye have also been said to be the cause of accusations of “bewitchment” that spurred the Salem witch trials.
Incredible Because: It is so tasty that you want more even though it makes you sick. Oh – and it glows.
The Jack o’Lantern mushroom (Omphalotus olearius) is an orange- to yellow-gill mushroom that to an untrained eye appears similar to some chanterelles, and is most notable for its bioluminescent properties. Previous names include Omphalotus illudens and Clitocybe illudens. Unlike the chanterelle, the Jack o’Lantern mushroom is poisonous. While not lethal, consuming this mushroom leads to very severe cramps, vomiting, and diarrhea. Complicating its toxicity is the fact that it smells and looks very appealing, to the extent that there are reports of repeat poisonings from individuals who were tempted to try them a second time.
Incredible Because: It invades, mummifies, and grows from caterpillas
Caterpillar fungus is the result of a parasitic relationship between the fungus Cordyceps and the larva of the ghost moth. The caterpillar prone to infection by the fungus lives underground in alpine grass and shrublands on the Tibetan Plateau and the Himalayas at an altitude between 3000m and 5000m. Spending up to five years underground before pupating, the caterpillar is attacked while feeding on roots. The fungus invades the body of the Thitarodes caterpillars, filling its entire body cavity with mycelium and eventually killing and mummifying it. The caterpillars die near the tops of their burrows. The dark brown to black fruiting body (or mushroom) emerges from the ground in spring or early summer, always growing out of the forehead of the caterpillar. The long, usually columnar fruiting body reaches 5-15 cm above the surface and releases spores. The fungus is a medicinal mushroom which is highly prized by practitioners of Tibetan medicine, Chinese medicine and traditional herbal Folk medicines, in which it is used as an aphrodisiac and as a treatment for a variety of ailments from fatigue to cancer.
Incredible Because: It is stunning to look at and is used in cancer therapy
Trametes versicolor, formerly known as Coriolus versicolor and Polyporus versicolor, is a common mushroom of the genus Trametes. Versicolor means ‘of several colors’ and it is true that this mushroom is found in a wide variety of different colors. It is commonly called the “Turkey Tail” in the United States because of its resemblance to the tail of the turkey bird. In Europe and Japan, polysaccharide-K (brand name Krestin), a chemical derived from Trametes versicolor, is an approved adjuvant for cancer therapy. This means that while it doesn’t specifically affect cancer cells itself, consumption of the fungus enhances and increases the potency and ability of certain cancer drugs. Recent testing has shown that it may also have anti-HIV properties.
Incredible Because: It turns a lump of curdled milk curds into one of the tastiest delights around
The major industrial use of Penicillium roqueforti is the production of blue cheeses, flavoring agents, antifungals, polysaccharides, proteases and other enzymes. The fungus has been a constituent of Roquefort, Stilton and other blue cheeses eaten by humans since about 50 AD; blue cheese is mentioned in literature as far back as AD 79, when Pliny the Elder remarked upon its rich flavor. Penicillium roqueforti is found in the soil of the caves of Mont Combalou in Roquefort-sur-Soulzon. Traditionally cheesemakers extracted it by leaving bread in the caves for six to eight weeks until it was consumed by the mold. The interior of the bread was then dried to produce a powder. Nowadays the mold can be produced in a laboratory, which allows for greater consistency. The mold may either be added to the curd, or introduced as an aerosol, through holes poked in the rind.
Incredible Because: It toppled the Italian lemon industry and is used in the production of high fructose corn syrup
Industrial-scale citric acid production began in 1890 based on the Italian citrus fruit industry. But a mere 27 years later (in 1917,) the American food chemist James Currie discovered that certain strains of the mold Aspergillus niger could be efficient citric acid producers, and Pfizer began industrial-level production using this technique two years later, followed by Citrique Belge in 1929. This caused the toppling of the Italian citrus industry. Aspergillus niger is also used in the production of high fructose corn syrup (HFCS). In the United States, HFCS is typically used as a sugar substitute and is ubiquitous in processed foods and beverages, including soft drinks, yogurt, cookies, salad dressing and tomato soup.
Incredible Because: It led to significant advances in the study of genes and DNA
Neurospora crassa was used by Edward Tatum and George Wells Beadle in their experiments for which they won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1958. Beadle and Tatum exposed N. crassa to x-rays, causing mutations. They then observed failures in metabolic pathways caused by errors in specific enzymes. This led them to propose the “one gene, one enzyme” hypothesis that specific genes code for specific proteins. Neurospora is actively used in research around the world. It is important in the elucidation of molecular events involved in circadian rhythms, epigenetics and gene silencing, cell polarity, development, as well as many aspects of cell biology and biochemistry.
Incredible Because: It is used to make bread, wine, and beer
Saccharomyces cerevisiae is a species of budding yeast. It is perhaps the most useful yeast owing to its use since ancient times in baking and brewing. It is believed that it was originally isolated from the skins of grapes (one can see the yeast as a component of the thin white film on the skins of some dark-colored fruits such as plums.) Saccharomyces cerevisiae is the microorganism that is responsible for fermentation in beer. It metabolizes the sugars extracted from grains, which produces alcohol and carbon dioxide, and thereby turns wort into beer. In addition to fermenting the beer, it influences the character and flavor.
Incredible Because: It changed the face of Ireland and the face of modern America
The Great Famine was a period of starvation, disease and mass emigration between 1845 and 1852 during which the population of Ireland was reduced by 20 to 25 percent. Approximately one million of the population died and a million more emigrated from Ireland’s shores. Many of those leaving fled to America and other parts of the New World. By 1850, the Irish made up a quarter of the population in Boston, Massachusetts; New York City; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; and Baltimore, Maryland. The famine was caused by the fungus Phytophthora infestans. How and when it arrived in Europe is still uncertain; at least one of the sources of the infection suggests it may have originated in the northern Andes region of South America, Peru in particular. It was then conveyed to Europe on ships carrying guano, where it was in great demand as a fertilizer on European and British farms.
Incredible Because: Life-saving penicillin come from it
Penicillin antibiotics are historically significant because they were the first drugs that were effective against many previously serious diseases such as syphilis and Staphylococcus infections. It was discovered in 1928 when Alexander Fleming’s lab assistant left a window open overnight and had mold spores cover his Staphylococcus bacterial specimens in a Petri dish. At first he was very irritated at the contamination but as he was about to throw the specimens away, he noticed something interesting. He looked under the microscope at the bacteria surrounding the blue-green mold and noticed that many were dead or dying due to the mold preventing the bacteria from making new cell walls and reproducing. He identified the mold as Penicillium notatum (now known as Penicillium chrysogenum), which releases the antibiotic penicillin G into the medium. After this he did some testing on humans and animals and discovered that not only did it kill bacteria, but that it was suitable for use in humans and animals.
This article is licensed under the GFDL because it contains quotations from Wikipedia.






























Sweet trident of Poseidon! I loves me some chanterelle pasta! After the first couple of rains of the season, we wait about a week and go hunting under oak trees in our “secret” part of the woods where we live. Chanterelle heaven. Every season we harvest at least a few hundred pounds. We eat about half the load, and a local restaurant pays us $20/lb. for the other half. Can’t wait for November! I love FUNGUSES!!!
58 jfrater–you should get a new dictionary! I thought my 1981 dictionary was old!
@a person (62): My dictionary may be old but the old words are still the same
It just lacks some of the new words that have come about such as “lol” – and I already know what they mean
@Diogenes, are you thinking of Legionnaires disease? So named because a convention of Legionnaires occurred in a hotel where many people became sick and some died. It was found that mold in the air conditioning had sickened them.
Interesting tidbit about Pfizer. Not only did they excel at citric acid production, but they used the same process on penicillin and it helped save countless soldiers’ lives during WW2. Unfortunately, many of us are allergic or immune to it because of over use and misunderstanding of viral vs. bacterial infection in the years immediately after.
Why do people come here to nitpick? Fungi or funguses who gives a crap, find something better to do.
Great list!
you could say jfrater is a fungi to be with… or should that be a funguses to be with?
the jack o’ lantern one sounds like alcohol tbh. makes you sick, but you still want more. yeah…
also, the irish potato famine was caused by the british government of the time being dicks, rather than the fungus, but it was a great list so i guess i can let it pass
I know the bottom of the article says “quotations taken from wikipedia” but was anything in here original or was every single world copied from wiki articles? The stuff that wasn’t taken from the list of the 10 Funguses That Changed History published in the Book of Lists, I mean.
to #64 mrsmarvel- hey, you’re right. In a roundabout way I was thinking of Legionnaire’s disease. My recollection is fuzzy, but the article I read was concerning a more recent outbreak (mid/late 90s) at an office complex and I’m sure the article went into the history about the convention and “sick building syndrome”. I just hadn’t made the connection in my original(off the top of my head) post. So yeh, thank you. Due to your response I’ve looked into it a little further and my interest has been re-sparked.
With the namesake origin of 1976: 29 people died within a few days(from one source) and 34 total deaths (from wikipedia). 221 became sick (this was out of the 4,400 who attended)
@jfrater (63):
oh, jfrater…PLEASE don’t consider ‘lol’ as actual vocabulary…
i’m still reeling after reading about the corn smut a few lists back, haha.
Great list, Jamie. Really interesting. I remember going to an exhibit years ago, where they had fungi of all types. Some were under black lights and were beautiful. But like some of these, some were beneficial and some were deadly. I will stick to “Magic Mushrooms”.
Jesus you know you’re not cool when you’re reading lists about “Top 10 incredible funguses” lol
interesting list though
I was just reading about fungus yesterday. Don’t know what sparked the research, but I read articles on a bunch of what’s in that top ten up there. This is not the first time a list has followed on the heels of me researching something. It wouldn’t take much more paranoia to believe JFrater where hacking into my comp and following my search history. If that’s true, please disregard anything I looked up from 4:18 to 4:45 this morning.
why would you want to say funguses? LOL! do you say breasteses too?
@jussayin (74): Breasts is already plural – fungus is not. Funguses is correct English – it is as correct as fungi.
I actually consumed quite alot of Cordyceps in the form of medicinal soups when I was a kid. I was pretty weak as a baby due to birth complications and it was supposed to help, God knows but hey, I turned out fine in the end so what the heck. Tastes alright too.
29 timmar68
I have to agree with you there. I cannot STAND mushrooms. People think I’m nuts, because the majority loves them. I think they taste like dirt.
That's exactly what they taste like to me, too. I wonder if we're missing some gene or other. Or maybe it's everyone else who's defective!
36 Lifeschool
In the version I have, she asks the executioner to cut off her feet. Then the little red shoes with the feet dance outside her door and torment her until she repents her vanity.
Andersen was awesome. When I was a kid, that scared the hell out of me.
A slight correction. Although the discovery of Penicillium’s ability to inhibit bacteria was made in Alexander Fleming’s lab, his technicians made the discovery. He got the awards.
Erm, possibly another correction. I watched QI the other day and they mentioned that penicillium properties were discovered by Ernest Duschesne. Here’s what was said (via wikipedia)
Penicillin was discovered by Ernest Duchesne. He discovered that Arab stable boys rubbed a mould on themselves that helped them get rid of saddle sores. The Institut Pasteur rejected his claims, but in 1949, five years after Fleming received his Nobel Prize, he was posthumously given the credit of re-discovering it, so Fleming can only claim to have re-re-discovered it. Ironically, he (Duschesne) died of TB, which if he had some penicillin, he wouldn’t have died.
Wait that means Arab stable boys discovered penicillium healing properties first, right?.
Nice list but you forgot Fungus The Bogeyman!!!
several cool pictures (especially the glowing fungus) and I need these info for biology class.
@Rufus (15): Hmmm….. I’m a teenage dude too
@oouchan (28): heh… your dad is so lucky at least.
@Pita Bread (65): Fungi or funguses who gives a crap, find something better to do.
pretty much.
psilocybin!!!
not funguses! it’s FUNGI
@izo (89): not funguses! it’s FUNGI
Please cite your source for this claim.
great list. Who doesn’t love fungi?
@Timfy (81): legend!
THis is incrideble list it gives us a lot of knowledge
I think the difference between fungi and funguses is the same as fish versus fishes. Fish is more than one of the same type of fish, while fishes means more than one of several or more different type of fish.
Ergot poisoning is not even comparable to acid, which was originally synthesized in the 1930s by a German scientist.
For example, LSD does not *generally* cause you to vomit uncontrollably, seizure or cause burning sensations.
Just thought it should be said for the sake of accuracy.
Oi. One more reason to not consume high fructose corn syrup…
How times change. “fungi” was only correct in Latin when I was young.
Check this out.
http://www.abc.net.au/science/news/enviro/EnviroRepublish_828525.htm
I’ve had #8… now i know, for a fact, my mother was full of crap when i what the hell it was.
#10
it is not the source of LSD, it is the source of LSA, another hallucinagen but not quite the same
English has imported many words from other languages. For some we keep the original plural ending – “criterion” > “criteria”. For some we use the English plural ending “s” or “es” – most of them. For some we can use either (sometimes making a distinction between the two) – “indexes” of a book or “indices” mathematically.
We quite happily say “animals”, “kindergartens”, “cafes” (even when spelled with the accent), “kangaroos” and “igloos”, regardless of how plurals are formed in Latin, German, French, Guugu Yimithirr or Inuit.
So use “fungi” if you think “fungus” is a Latin word, and “funguses” if you think it is an English (or English-ised) word.
We have dung loving psilocybe in the hills round my valley. Pretty weak, you have to eat a few ounces to feel the mild “sillycybin” effects for about an hour. I like those fungusesesesesesesesesesess.
Im alergic to penicilin, wich its kinda good because people says it hurts when u get a shot of it
This list puts the ‘fun’ in fungi.
nice but it should have a hypothesis and every thig
Regarding #8, Cordyceps sinensis, I was reading in a National Geographic (I think) about some Tibetans being well off financially from digging up these caterpillars and selling them. The article was about someone who was traipsing around, following the old Spice Road (again, I think), and mentioned in passing that you seldom see Tibetans traveling in the old way anymore, by horse, because now they can afford nice cars. The caterpillars are found only in certain meadows and have to be dug up after the snow melts. Interesting article, but I didn't retain as much as I should have, since I'm damn sure I'm not going to be eating any fungus infected caterpillars.
I'm assuming you used 'funguses' instead of 'fungi' just to bother your audience, and for that, I applaude you.
It's surprising how some people consider mold to be disgusting, but then eat it and use it to cure diseases… Amazing!
I love mushrooms!!!