I was introduced yesterday to the FIMS hypothesis by PBS Eons.

The Fungal-Infection-Mammalian-Selection (hey that ryhmes!) hypothesis asks the question of why reptiles didn’t bounce back as much as mammals did after the asteroid K/Pg extinction event.

After all, they need less energy than mammals as cold-blooded creatures, and they produce way way more offspring than mammals.

One theory is fungi: there was an explosion in fungal activity after the asteroid due to the now dark and dingy hellhole the Earth became, and a ton of fungal spores were floating around at the time, as seen in geological record.

Apparently fungal infections are not that deadly to mammals (it just irritates us), but were disastrous for reptiles. Plus us mammals had a new food source in the absence of plants and meat.

There’s no conclusive proof, still, it’s an interesting theory as to why the dinosaurs didn’t bounce back and why us mammals took over.

  • @[email protected]
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    132 months ago

    Wait, dinosaurs were not cold-blooded lizards. Are we talking lizards, reptiles including extinct dinosaurs or reptiles including dinosaurs including birds?

  • NeelixBiederman [he/him]
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    42 months ago

    Further evidence to support my theory that fungi are a cognizant alien species trying to subtly guide mammals/humanity to a better future

    • @[email protected]
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      12 months ago

      can they maybe stop being subtle about it and just infect us and hook us into the mycelial internet? if we had a similar situation going on to what the blue aliens in avatar did with their brain tree i think things would be going a lot better…

  • @[email protected]
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    2 months ago

    Depends on the type of fungus, fungal infections from birds, bars, and the ground are quite serious infections, and often require toxic anti fungal to kill it. If you heard amphotericin B, it’s used to treat lethal fungal infections, but it’s a toxic agent. Candida can be quite serious in immunocompromised people, but is was originally often found in people with hiv. Mammals were quite smaller and they could survive on less food, plus their niche was mostly small or nocturnal insects around the time of the dinosaurs, and most insect and plant orders survived the extinction event.

    Bats themselves are mysterious as they don’t know when they evolved, or what animal they came from. Just like bed bugs which came from bats, but nobody knows where their origins came from

  • @[email protected]
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    252 months ago

    You know, I was convinced that my chickens would eat any leftovers from the fridge that were about to go bad, but the one thing that they wouldn’t touch was mushrooms. I didn’t realize that the reason for that went all the way back to the extinction event that killed the dinosaurs.

    • @[email protected]
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      22 months ago

      i’d imagine it’s more down to mushrooms being kinda hard to digest (even humans struggle with this, especially if we’re not used to eating mushrooms) and basically just being textured water with few nutrients.

    • happybadger [he/him]
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      2 months ago

      For what it’s worth, they and other livestock love mycelium from culinary species like Pleurotus ostreatus. The substrate is healthy myceliated straw/grain with the complex carbs predigested by the fungi and it has immune system benefits for them: https://openagriculturejournal.com/contents/volumes/V17/e187433152305260/e187433152305260.pdf

      My ideal homestead revolves around multi-tiered green recycling using them. The fungi break down the garden waste that the chickens won’t eat, the unproductive mushroom colonies go to the chickens and pigeon towers, the manure and eggshells go into the vermicomposter and garden. Those mushroom colonies are a major cash crop with a myriad of health benefits depending on what you’re growing.

    • @[email protected]
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      22 months ago

      That’s a cool fact, do you have a source I could check out and read through? I tried some light web searching but couldn’t find anything saying this.

      • @[email protected]
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        62 months ago

        No, it was just an observation about the backyard chickens I used to have. I have no idea if my chickens couldn’t eat mushrooms or if they just didn’t care for them.

        • @[email protected]
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          42 months ago

          ahh, that makes sense, thanks. Yeah, in what brief research I did, it does appear like there are a lot of mushrooms that aren’t safe for chickens and lizards, possibly due to their biological differences, but that there were still a good number of mushrooms they could eat.

          The interesting thing you were alluding to is that they have some biological instinct to not eat shrooms because maybe it wiped a lot of them out at one point. That’d be super cool to link :)