National Park Service LogoU.S. Department of the InteriorNational Park ServiceNational Park Service
National Park Service:  U.S. Department of the InteriorNational Park Service Arrowhead
Carlsbad Caverns National ParkTemple of the Sun in the Big Room of Carlsbad Cavern.
view map
text size:largestlargernormal
printer friendly
Carlsbad Caverns National Park
Mushrooms and Other Fungi
Mushrooms also hide in the park, appearing only after a rain.
NPS Photo by Kristin Dorman-Johnson
Mushrooms also hide in the park, appearing only after a rain.
 

Dry and sunny as deserts are, they are almost never without fungi. It doesn’t seem right, but we mostly hear about the forest mushrooms that grow in lush, moist, dark areas. However, they are essential parts of all ecosystems, including our desert.

First, it’s also important to realize that fungi are not plants. They do not have chlorophyll, the pigment needed for photosynthesis. Fungi cannot capture sunlight and manufacture the carbon compounds needed for living.

Second, we should note that mushrooms are really just the above-ground visible structures of many (but not all) types of fungi. They are a mechanism for dispersing the spores with which fungi reproduce and spread. The bulk of fungal activity goes on at a microscopic level, in the hyphae, which are very long structures that are a single cell wide.

One very important type of fungus is ectomycorrhizae (which means external root fungi). These fungi wrap themselves around the tiny root tips and engage in a symbiotic relationship with most plants on earth—scientists say 80 to 95 percent of plants. They take up mineral nutrients from the soil and exchange them with plants for photosynthetically fixed carbon, thereby benefiting the plants and the fungi. Mycoorhizal fungi are therefore very important, constituting a major energy flow pathway in terrestrial ecosystems—including the deserts.

Of course, the park also has mushrooms. They pop up from time to time among the grasses after there has been a good wetting rain.

Soda straws in Carlsbad Cavern.  

Did You Know?
Most of the formations—or speleothems—found inside Carlsbad Cavern today were active and growing during the last ice age when instead of having a desert above the cave, there were pine forests.

Last Updated: October 26, 2007 at 16:12 EST