Spore Sized: This Purple Mushroom Stores Arsenic Like the Ocean
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概要
Laccaria amethystina, known as the Amethyst Deceiver, is one of the most visually striking mushrooms in the forest—and one of the most chemically bizarre.
This vivid purple fungus is an extreme arsenic hyperaccumulator, capable of storing massive amounts of toxic arsenic in its tissues. But instead of being poisoned, it converts the element into arsenobetaine, a non-toxic compound previously believed to exist only in marine organisms. This means the mushroom uses a detoxification strategy normally found in ocean life—while living in forest soil.
Its signature purple color comes from a rare pigment called laccaridione A, which acts as both a UV shield and antimicrobial defense. However, this pigment is thermally unstable—causing the mushroom to lose its color completely when cooked.
Ecologically, L. amethystina is part of a rare group known as ammonia fungi, thriving in nitrogen-rich environments created by decomposition. It can appear in massive numbers years after organic matter breaks down, turning death into new biological growth.
Even more surprising, it may not be entirely peaceful. Closely related species are known to trap and digest microscopic soil animals, suggesting that this mushroom could be a stealthy carnivore supplementing its nitrogen intake.
Adding to its complexity, the Amethyst Deceiver exists as a holobiont, hosting nitrogen-fixing bacteria within its tissues. These microbes help supply nutrients and protect the fungus from pathogens, effectively making it a multi-organism survival system.
From arsenic metabolism and color-shifting pigments to possible carnivory and symbiotic bacteria, this episode explores how one small purple mushroom challenges everything we think we know about life on land.