HomeMy WebLinkAbout7/24/2023 Item Non-agenda, Rosten
Wilbanks, Megan
Sent:Wednesday, July 12, 2023 8:20 AM
To:Colunga-Lopez, Andrea
Subject:FW: The Washington Post: Can mushrooms prevent megafires?
Attachments:Can mushrooms help prevent wildfires - The Washington Post.pdf
Would you please process Emily’s email/attachment as Non-Agenda Correspondence for the Tree Committee?
She likes sharing informative articles with her TC Members every now and then. Thanks!
From: Emily <
Sent: Tuesday, July 11, 2023 9:22 PM
To: Wilbanks, Megan <mwilbanks@slocity.org>
Subject: The Washington Post: Can mushrooms prevent megafires?
This message is from an External Source. Use caution when deciding to open attachments, click links, or respond.
Hi Megan,
I hope you are having a good summer. I found this article that might be of interest to the tree committee.
Thanks,
Emily
Can mushrooms prevent megafires?
Fungi could turn piles of potential wildfire fuel into soil.
By Stephen Robert Miller
1
https://www.washingtonpost.com/climate-solutions/2023/07/10/wildfire-prevention-mushroom-
composting/
2
CLIMATE SOLUTIONS
Can
mushrooms
prevent
mega res?
By Stephen Robert Miller
July 10, 2023 at 6:30 a.m. EDT
If you’ve gone walking in the woods out West lately, you might have encountered a pile of
sticks. Or perhaps hundreds of them, heaped as high as your head and strewn about the forest
like Viking funeral pyres awaiting a flame.
These slash piles are an increasingly common sight in the American West, as land managers
work to thin out unnaturally dense sections of forests — the result of a commitment to fire
suppression that has inadvertently increased the risk of devastating megafires.
“We have an epidemic of trees in Colorado,” said Stefan Reinold, a forester with Boulder
County’s Parks and Open Space department.
In the Rocky Mountain forests that he manages, a century of stamping out wildfires as soon as
they arose failed to account for the role fire plays in maintaining healthy forest ecosystems.
Today, the resulting abundance of densely packed pines and firs fuels huge blazes.
In response, the federal government has committed nearly $5 billion in the Inflation Reduction
Act and Bipartisan Infrastructure Law to thinning forests on about 50 million Western acres
over the next 10 years. Although this can be accomplished with prescribed burns, the risk of
https://www.washingtonpost.com/climate-solutions/2023/07/10/wildfire-prevention-mushroom-composting/7/11/23, 9:17 PM
Page 1 of 4
over the next 10 years. Although this can be accomplished with prescribed burns, the risk of
controlled fires getting out of hand has foresters embracing another solution: selectively sawing
trees, then stripping the limbs from their trunks and collecting the debris.
The challenge now is what to do with all those piles of sticks, which create fire hazards of their
own. Some environmental scientists believe they have an answer: mushrooms. Fungus has an
uncommon knack for transformation. Give it garbage, plastic, even corpses, and it will convert
them all into something else — for instance, nutrient-rich soil.
An alternative to re
Down where the Rocky Mountains meet the plains, in pockets of forest west of Denver,
mycologists like Zach Hedstrom are harnessing this unique trait to transform fire fuel into a
valuable asset for local agriculture.
For Hedstrom, the idea sprung from an experiment on a local organic vegetable farm. He and
the farm owner had introduced a native oyster mushroom to wood chips from a tree that fell in
a windstorm.
“That experiment showed us that the native fungi were helping to accelerate the decomposition
really substantially,” he said. Working with local governments, environmental coalitions and
farmers, he is now honing the method.
As part of its regional strategy, the U.S. Forest Service plans to thin more than 47 square miles
— an area larger than Disney World — along Colorado’s Front Range. Hundreds of thousands
of slash piles already lay in wait here until conditions are right. Ideally, this means snow on the
ground, moisture in the air and little wind. It can be a hard recipe to come by.
When slash piles are set alight, they burn longer and hotter than most wildfires over a
concentrated area. This leaves behind blistered soil where native vegetation struggles for
decades to take root. As an alternative, foresters have tried chipping trees on-site and
broadcasting the mulch across the forest floor, where it degrades at a snail’s pace in the arid
climate. Boulder County also carts some of its slash to biomass heating systems at two public
buildings.
“We’re removing a ton of wood out of forests for fire mitigation,” Hedstrom said. “This is not a
super sustainable way of managing it.”
https://www.washingtonpost.com/climate-solutions/2023/07/10/wildfire-prevention-mushroom-composting/7/11/23, 9:17 PM
Page 2 of 4
He hopes to show that fungi can do it better.
“Cold re”
Jeffrey Ravage is a forester with the Coalition for the Upper South Platte, which manages
protection and restoration of a more-than-million-acre watershed in the mountains southwest
of Denver. He describes the action of saprophytes, a type of fungi that feeds off dead organic
matter, as “cold fire.”
Like a flame, saprophytic fungi break organic material into carbon compounds. Mycelium, the
often unseen, root-like structure of the fungi, secretes digestive enzymes that release nutrients
from the substrate it consumes. Whereas a flame destroys nearly all organic nitrogen,
mycelium can fortify nitrogen where it’s needed in the forest floor.
“We do hundreds to thousands of acres of fire mitigation a year,” Ravage said.
Standard thinning costs somewhere around $3,000 per acre, about a third of which is spent
hauling out or burning the slash. Using mycelium could drastically reduce that cost. With the
right kind of fungi, he said, “we can do in five years what nature could take 50 years to a
century to do: create organic soil.”
Though the method is new, it’s not untried. At the Balcones Canyonlands Preserve, north of
Austin, biologist Lisa O’Donnell deploys mycelium to combat invasive glossy privet that spill
over from surrounding urban sprawl. After the intrusive trees are cut and piled, volunteers
inoculate — or seed — them with native turkey tail fungi, which takes about three years to
transform hard logs into crumbly sponges. Eventually, the woody material breaks down into a
rich and water-retentive loam that O’Donnell uses to rebuild the Balcones’ deteriorated soils.
“You don’t have to burn it or haul it out. You’re using that biomass, keeping it in place and
recycling it,” she said. “You’re turning a negative into a positive.”
Mushroom spread
For mycelium to be a truly viable solution to wildfires, however, it would have to work at the
scale of the Western landscape. Hedstrom is experimenting with brewing mycelium into a
https://www.washingtonpost.com/climate-solutions/2023/07/10/wildfire-prevention-mushroom-composting/7/11/23, 9:17 PM
Page 3 of 4
liquid that can be sprayed across hundreds of acres. “It’s a novel biotech solution that has great
promise, but is in the early stages,” he said.
Ravage doubts it could be so easy. “Half the battle is how you target the slash,” he said. Success
stories like Balcones are rare. Ravage has spent a decade cultivating wild saprophytes and
perfecting methods of applying them in Colorado’s forests.
He begins by mulching slash to give his fungi a head start. Then he seeds the mulch with
spawn, or spores that have already begun growing on blocks of the same material, and wets
them down. Fungi require damp conditions and will survive in the mulch if it is piled deeply
enough. Given the changing character of Western forests, however, aridity poses a serious
hurdle.
At his lab in the Rockies, Ravage grows about a ton of spawn annually. To meet the demands of
forest-fire mitigation, he wants to produce 12 tons every week. This presents an opportunity for
intrepid mushroom farmers, should the government choose to fund them, but it’s not the only
way agriculture could benefit.
“There’s going to be a lot of wood chip waste continuously coming out of the forest,” said Andy
Breiter, a rancher in Boulder County. “We can use those resources.”
Some Front Range farmers pay to truck in compost from Vermont. Instead of adding synthetic
fertilizers or importing compost, Breiter is using Hedstrom’s mycelium to turn forest slash into
organic soil that he can work into his degraded land.
“I’m trying to increase the productivity of my land while recognizing that past systems of
productivity created these problems to begin with,” Breiter said.
This story was produced in collaboration with the Food & Environment Reporting Network, a
nonprofit journalism organization.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/climate-solutions/2023/07/10/wildfire-prevention-mushroom-composting/7/11/23, 9:17 PM
Page 4 of 4