Loading NewKerala.com...

First 1,000 fungi on IUCN Red List reveal growing threats

IANS March 28, 2025 167 views

The IUCN Red List now includes over 1,000 fungi species, many facing extinction due to deforestation, pollution, and climate shifts. Fungi play a crucial role in ecosystems, supporting plant life and decomposition. Experts warn that losing fungi could destabilize food security and carbon storage. Conservation efforts must prioritize fungi to maintain biodiversity and ecological resilience.

"Fungi are the unsung heroes of life on earth, forming the very foundation of healthy ecosystems—yet they have long been overlooked." — Dr. Grethel Aguilar, IUCN Director General
Gland (Switzerland), March 27: The number of fungi species on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species has surpassed 1,000, confirming that deforestation, agricultural expansion and urban development are driving these species to decline worldwide.

Key Points

1

Deforestation and agriculture threaten 198 fungi species

2

Nitrogen pollution endangers 91 European fungi

3

Climate change alters fire patterns, risking 50 US fungi

4

Fungi sustain ecosystems, crops, and carbon storage

Thursday's update also reveals that frankincense trees face an increasing risk of extinction, and new Green Status assessments show the impact of conservation on species, including the lion.

The IUCN Red List now includes 169,420 species, of which 47,187 are threatened with extinction. The addition of 482 newly assessed fungi species brings their number on the IUCN Red List to 1,300, of which at least 411 are at risk of extinction.

"Fungi are the unsung heroes of life on earth, forming the very foundation of healthy ecosystems -- yet they have long been overlooked. Thanks to the dedication of experts and citizen scientists, we have taken a vital step forward: over 1,000 of the world's 155,000 known fungal species have now been assessed for the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, the most comprehensive source of information on extinction risk. Now, it's time to turn this knowledge into action and safeguard the extraordinary fungal kingdom, whose vast underground networks sustain nature and life as we know it," said Dr Grethel Aguilar, IUCN Director General.

Rapid growth of agricultural and urban areas has replaced fungi habitats, putting 279 species at risk of extinction.

Nitrogen and ammonia run-off from fertilisers and engine pollution also threaten 91 species. These are serious threats in Europe, impacting species that are well-known in traditional countryside such as the vulnerable fibrous waxcap (Hygrocybe intermedia).

At least 198 species of fungi are at risk of extinction due to deforestation for timber production, illegal logging, and clearing for agriculture. Clear-cutting of old-growth forests is especially damaging, destroying fungi that do not have time to re-establish with rotation forestry.

Thirty per cent of old-growth pine forests across Finland, Sweden and Russia have been cut down since 1975, pushing species such as the giant knight (Tricholoma colossus) to become vulnerable. Climate change is impacting fungi.

Over 50 fungi species are at risk of extinction due to changes in fire patterns in the US, which have drastically changed forests. Firs have grown to dominate the high Sierra Nevada mountain woods since 1980, reducing habitat for the endangered Gastroboletus citrinobrunneus.

"While fungi mainly live hidden underground and inside wood, their loss impacts the life above-ground that depends on them. As we lose fungi, we impoverish the ecosystem services and resilience they provide, from drought and pathogen resistance in crops and trees to storing carbon in the soil," said Prof Anders Dahlberg, Red List Authority Coordinator of the IUCN SSC Mushroom, Bracket and Puffball Specialist Group.

"It is important that more old-growth forests are protected. Forestry practices should consider fungi, for example, leaving dead wood and scattered trees, and proactive forest management can help manage fire intensity."

Fungi constitute their own kingdom, distinct from animals and plants. They are the second biggest kingdom after animals, with an estimated 2.5 million species, of which around 155,000 are named. They underpin all ecosystems; most plants partner with fungi to take in nutrients, and therefore cannot exist without them, and they make decomposition possible.

Many are edible, used in food and drink production, including fermentation, form the basis of medicines, and support bioremediation efforts to clean contaminated sites.

Tags:
You May Like!