header image

[Sign Up Now] to Receive Our FREE Daily SCVTV-SCVNews Digest by E-Mail

Inside
Weather


 
Calendar
Today in
S.C.V. History
May 4
1903 - President Teddy Roosevelt visits Gov. Henry Gage at Acton Hotel [story]
Acton Hotel


Back to Nature | Commentary by Paul A. Levine
| Thursday, Feb 12, 2015

paullevine2One usually thinks of a fungus as “icky,” and there is no way you’d eat one, right?

The impression is that a fungus is creepy. It grows in dark, moist places, obtaining its nutrition from decaying plant and animal matter, and it is generally to be avoided.

Indeed, fungi – which include molds, fungus and mushrooms – are members of nature’s cleanup crew to help recycle living things that have died, returning their nutrients into the ecosystem, allowing them to support the next generation of plants and animals.

Molds are a form of fungus, and black mold, commonly found in homes, can be hazardous to one’s health. However, there is a large variety of fungi, and some of them are either directly or indirectly beneficial to mankind, while others are delicious and a great addition to one’s diet.

Last month we focused on the less pleasant side of fungi. Today, the focus will be on the benefits of fungi.

For literally thousands of years, Eastern cultures have revered mushrooms, commonly including them in many meals. But before turning to the nutritional value of fungi, I should like to focus on a medicinal benefit.

Petri dish with penicillin mold growing on it and displacing the bacteria

Petri dish with penicillin mold growing on it and displacing the bacteria

Penicillin comes from fungi, and specifically from molds. The discovery of penicillin was really an accident. Sir Alexander Fleming was a bacteriologist working at St. Mary’s Hospital in Paddington, England. (Paddington, the stuffed bear of recent literary and movie fame, got his name from the train station in England). He was actively looking for a material that would inhibit the growth of bacteria.

This started in 1922. While working with some bacteria, he had a runny nose, and some of the mucus dropped onto the Petri dish. The bacteria in the dish disappeared. So his first discovery was that there was a natural substance in tears and nasal mucus that helps the body to fight germs.

He continued his studies by trying to find a substance that could kill bacteria but not adversely impact the human body. To do this, he would grow bacteria in a Petri dish – a small, shallow glass dish with a glass cover – filled with a nutritional medium on which the bacteria could grow. Then, once the bacteria culture was growing well, he would add various items to the Petri dish to assess their impact on the continued growth of the bacteria.

Well, like all of us, he was entitled to vacation. When he returned, he found that most of the Petri dishes had been contaminated and had to be cleaned before the nutrient, agar gel, could be replaced and the experiments started over again.

He found that some of the Petri dishes on which bacteria had been growing now had a mold that was replacing and even eliminating the bacteria. The bacteria that it killed was one that was particularly virulent to man; it was Staphylococcus aureus, comprised of small, round bacteria whose colonies had a golden color.

Working with a mycologist (a scientist who studies mold), they identified that the mold was in the family Penicillium, and hence the name penicillin that is well known to everybody as one of the first antibiotics. Indeed, this mold killed a large number of different bacteria.

Professor Fleming, however, was not a chemist and could not isolate the specific active ingredient. He wrote a paper about these observations in 1929 that was largely ignored by the medical profession at the time. It wasn’t until 1940 that two chemists at Oxford University, Howard Florey from Australia and Ernst Chain from Germany, isolated the active ingredient that we know today as penicillin. All three – Fleming, Florey and Chain – received the Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine for the discovery in 1945. Fleming was also knighted and is credited with discovering penicillin. And all of this from a fungus.

Another fungus in the Streptomyces family gave us streptomycin, another powerful antibiotic. The challenge to medical science today is that the bacteria are not “dummies.” They have developed resistance to the older antibiotics which are becoming less and less effective, triggering the search for newer and more potent agents.

Morel mushrooms in the field

Morel mushrooms in the field

While the battle in the hospitals and pharmaceutical labs continues to identify and synthesize the next generation of antibiotic, we can continue to enjoy a multiplicity of mushrooms in our salads, as additives to other foods to enhance their flavor, and sometimes by themselves as an appetizer or main course. This includes morels, chanterelles and shitake mushrooms, but they are not the only ones.

Truffles are considered the king of all mushrooms, at least from a culinary perspective. They are dug up after being identified by pigs sniffing the ground. They look nothing like our classic conception of a mushroom.

Many of the fungi we eat are farmed. Shown here is a photo of a mushroom farm and another photo that I shot in Ya’an, China, in 2012, while on a butterfly photography trip, and we passed a fungus farm. The plastic-wrapped rolls of fungus were ready to take to market.

Chanterelle mushrooms

Chanterelle mushrooms

Besides tasting good and enhancing the flavor of many foods, mushrooms also hold great nutritional benefit, incorporating many different vitamins and trace minerals that are essential to our diet.

People who eat mushrooms on a regular basis are generally healthier than those who do not – but to what degree is due directly to the mushrooms. Those who eat mushrooms also tend to eat more natural foods and a healthier diet than those whose died includes lots of preprocessed and over-the-counter fast foods. For example, Vitamin D is an essential vitamin for our health and the strength of our bones. Vitamin D deficiency results in a disease called Ricketts.

Truffles do not look like a mushroom sitting on a plate waiting be cut up for inclusion is a sauce or other dish

Truffles do not look like a mushroom sitting on a plate waiting be cut up for inclusion is a sauce or other dish

The body makes its own vitamin D, but this requires exposure of a significant amount of skin to the sun on a regular and frequent basis. Even here in sunny Southern California, most of us are dressed for the majority of the day, work indoors, and even when we might go out hiking or jogging or just take a walk for an hour or two, we wear a hat to shade our face, along with pants and a shirt, even short pants and a short-sleeved shirt that covers the majority of our body.

Vitamin D is now incorporated as one vitamin in the various multivitamin pills that can be bought at the grocery store or pharmacy. It is a nutritional supplement in milk; our vegetables, fruits and meat have relatively little vitamin D. Mushrooms are high in Vitamin D.

Shitake mushrooms on a plate

Shitake mushrooms on a plate

Mushrooms are also a good source of other B-vitamins including Pantothenic acid, which helps with the production of hormones and the normal function of our nerve cells. Riboflavin helps to maintain healthy red blood cells while niacin promotes healthy skin, improves the digestive and nervous systems and helps to raise HDL cholesterol (the good cholesterol).

What about minerals? The body requires a multiplicity of “trace elements” which are minute amounts of minerals without which it will not function properly. Everyone one has heard about iron, which is absolutely essential for our red blood cells, but that is not a trace element, and we get lots of that from various vegetables like spinach and all red meats. Another is iodine, which is needed for the thyroid gland, although mushrooms cannot help us there, either.

A mushroom farm growing shitake mushrooms

A mushroom farm growing shitake mushrooms

Many people have not heard about selenium, which works as an antioxidant to protect the body from cell damage that might lead to heart disease, some cancers and a variety of diseases of aging. Many foods of animal origin and grains are good sources of selenium, but for vegetarians, their source of selenium is limited. Mushrooms are among the richest sources of selenium, proving 8 mcg to 22 mcg of selenium per serving.

Another trace mineral is copper, which helps to keep red blood cells healthy along with the bones and nerves. Everyone knows potassium is essential for the body and is high in citrus fruits like oranges and in bananas, but it is also high in mushrooms. Depending on the mushroom, there may be 98 mcg to 376 mcg of potassium in an 84-gram (just under 3-ounce) serving of mushrooms, and this is 3 percent to 11 percent of the daily required value.

A fungus farm in Ya’an, Sichuan Provence, China with “logs” of fungus packaged to be taken to the market.

A fungus farm in Ya’an, Sichuan Provence, China with “logs” of fungus packaged to be taken to the market.

Mushrooms include a naturally occurring antioxidant, ergothioneine, and provide 2.8 mg to 4.9 mg per serving of white, portabella or crimini mushrooms. Another key natural agent for the body is beta-glucans, which have an immunity-stimulating effect, contribute to resistance against allergies and may also aid in the metabolism of fats and sugars. These are found particularly in oyster, shitake and split gill mushrooms.

Like everything else in the natural world, some items are bad for us, while others are good for us, even in the same taxonomic order. There are bad mushrooms that can kill, but there are lots of good mushrooms and fungi that are beneficial and delicious.

 

Paul A. Levine is a docent-naturalist at Placerita Canyon Nature Center and an avid butterflier.

Comment On This Story
COMMENT POLICY: We welcome comments from individuals and businesses. All comments are moderated. Comments are subject to rejection if they are vulgar, combative, or in poor taste.
REAL NAMES ONLY: All posters must use their real individual or business name. This applies equally to Twitter account holders who use a nickname.

1 Comment

  1. Oh yeah because no one orders mushrooms on their pizza…

Leave a Comment


Opinion Section Policy
All opinions and ideas are welcome. Factually inaccurate, libelous, defamatory, profane or hateful statements are not. Your words must be your own. All commentary is subject to editing for legibility. There is no length limit, but the shorter, the better the odds of people reading it. "Local" SCV-related topics are preferred. Send commentary to: LETTERS (at) SCVNEWS.COM. Author's full name, community name, phone number and e-mail address are required. Phone numbers and e-mail addresses are not published except at author's request. Acknowledgment of submission does not guarantee publication.
Read More From...
RECENT COMMENTARY
Thursday, May 2, 2024
As we kick off the new month, I am proud to reflect on the incredible growth and achievements we've witnessed over the past four months.
Thursday, May 2, 2024
With spring in full effect, now is the best time to hit the trails and enjoy the natural scenery of Santa Clarita.
Wednesday, May 1, 2024
Imagine a day where barriers dissolve and possibilities unfold, a day dedicated to celebrating diversity and fostering inclusivity.
Monday, Apr 29, 2024
At the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors meeting this week, we reviewed the Chief Executive Officer's proposed $45.4 billion budget for the next fiscal year.
Thursday, Apr 25, 2024
Spring heralds a time of renewal and rejuvenation, not just in the natural world, but within our homes and lives as well.
Tuesday, Apr 23, 2024
Los Angeles County Fifth District Supervisor Kathryn Barger issued a statement in support of the Los Angeles County Chief Executive Officer’s presentation of a $45.4 billion budget for the forthcoming 2024-25 fiscal year.

Latest Additions to SCVNews.com
1903 - President Teddy Roosevelt visits Gov. Henry Gage at Acton Hotel [story]
Acton Hotel
The regular meeting of the Saugus Union School District Governing Board will take place Tuesday, May 7, with closed session beginning at 5:30 p.m., followed immediately by public session at 6:30 p.m.
May 7: Regular Meeting of the Saugus School Board
The city of Santa Clarita Arts Commission is holding its regular meeting in City Hall's Council Chambers Thursday, May 9 at 6 p.m. The meeting will be held at Santa Clarita City Hall, 23920 Valencia Blvd., Valencia, CA 91355.
May 9: Arts Commission to Hear Updates on Civic Art Projects
Experience the Butterfly Encounter at Gilchrist Farm open now on weekends thorugh Sunday, June 18. Walk through a tent of beautiful flowers hosting live butterflies that fly freely throughout the tent.
Experience the Butterfly Encounter at Gilchrist Farm
The Santa Clarita Community College District Board of Trustees will hold a business meeting Wednesday, May 8, beginning at 5 p.m. The board will first meet in closed session at 4:15 p.m.
May 8: COC Board Business Meeting Considers Contracts
The Castaic Union School District Governing Board will hold its regular meeting Thursday, May 8, at 6 p.m. A closed session will be held at 5:30 p.m.
May 8: Castaic Union School Board Regular Meeting
Fire Service Day Open House will be held at all County of Los Angeles Fire Department fire stations on Saturday, May 4 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
May 4: LACoFD Hosts Countywide Open House at All Fire Stations
The Santa Clarita Valley Media Collaborative invites the public as well as local creatives, media industry professionals, students, parents, teachers and others to celebrate the next generation of media makers participating in the inaugural NextGen MediaMakers Festival on Saturday, May 18 from 2-5 p.m. at the Canyon Country Community Center.
May 18: Support Young Creatives at NextGen MediaMakers Festival
Explore Vasquez Rocks during the magical twilight and early evening full moon hours. These fun, collaborative, interpretive hikes are led by trained staff and volunteers and will highlight the park's natural and human history.
Vasquez Rocks Full Moon Twilight Hikes
Astrotourism is top of mind for travelers making special trips for experiences in the sky, and with the recent “take-your-breath-away” total solar eclipse, thousands of cruisers onboard Emerald Princess and Discovery Princess off the coast of Mexico caught a glimpse of the total darkness event.
Princess Cruises Sails to Prime Viewing Spot for 2026 Total Solar Eclipse in Europe
The Santa Clarita City Council will hold a study session on Tuesday, May 7 at 5 p.m. The council will meet at City Hall, Carl Boyer Room, 23920 Valencia Blvd., First Floor, Santa Clarita, CA 91355.
May 7: City Council Conducts Budget Study Session
Garbage inspectors will soon be paying a visit to neighborshoods throughout the Santa Clarita Valley to inspect recycling bins to insure residents are following the recycling rules in the SCV.
Garbage Inspectors to Look for Improper Recycling
College of the Canyons competed at the 3C2A State Singles & Doubles Championships for a second straight year, with the doubles duo of Sydney Tamondong and Estrella Segura establishing program history by advancing to the round of 16 at the Ojai Athletic Club.
Canyons Advances to Day 3 of 3C2A State Championships
College of the Canyons men's basketball head coach Howard Fisher's Cougar Basketball Camp returns in 2024 with three sessions open to boys and girls ages 8 to 14.
Registration Open for 2024 Howard Fisher Cougar Basketball Camp
The Friends of Santa Clarita Public Library is hosting a “Spring Bag Sale” event at the Valencia, Canyon Country and Newhall branches of the Santa Clarita Public Library, during normal operating hours from Saturday, May 4 to Sunday, May 12.
May 4-12: Spring Bag Sale at Santa Clarita Public Library
A former public school teacher who launched a racist and anti-immigrant tirade against a Santa Clarita street vendor is being sued by a Latino civil rights group for civil assault and violating California civil rights laws.
MALDEF Sues Man After Rant at Fruit Vendor in SCV
The Village of Pine Mountain Club has hosted wine festivals since 2003. You can taste exciting wines from the world’s top wine-growing regions, with dozens of premier wineries to choose from on Saturday, July 6, 1-4 p.m. at Wine in the Pines.
July 6: Wine in the Pines, Pine Mountain Club
1842 - California's first mining district established in SCV; Ygnacio del Valle, chairman [story]
Ygnacio del Valle
The American Cancer Society Relay For Life of Santa Clarita Valley will be held Saturday, May 4, 9 a.m.-9 p.m. at Central Park, with the theme “May The Cure Be With You,” a Disney/Star Wars celebration.
May 4: SCV Relay for Life ‘May the Cure Be With You’
Ten risk-taking, mid-career artists were announced Thursday as the recipients of the 2024 Herb Alpert Award in the Arts (HAAIA).
CalArts Announces 2024 Herb Alpert Award Winners
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa -- The Master's University men's volleyball team won their opening match of the 2024 NAIA National Championship with a 3-set win over the No. 9-seed Mount Mercy (IA) Mustangs.
Mustangs Post-Season Play Continues After First Round Win
Andrew Skerratt did not anticipate graduating with an electrical engineering degree from The Master’s University.
TMU Student Set to be School’s First Electrical Engineering Graduate
Nichole Muro was brilliant in the circle through seven shutout innings and Gigi Garcia broke the game open with a two-run double in the sixth inning as No. 15 College of the Canyons got past No. 18 Cuesta College 4-0 in its 3C2A Southern California Regional Playoffs play-in game at Whitten Field on Tuesday.
Lady Cougs Advance to Next Round in Regional Playoffs
As we kick off the new month, I am proud to reflect on the incredible growth and achievements we've witnessed over the past four months.
Message from Carlos Orozco JCI President
SCVNews.com