2025 Past Lectures
Jun 25 / Maria Alice Neves
Ancient Fungi: The impact of fungi on the evolution of Earth
If you close your eyes and imagine earlier geological times of the Earth, what do you see? Are there mushrooms among the dinosaurs and the tree ferns? In this talk we will see how fungi have impacted the evolution of the Earth, transforming the planet into what it is today. Fossils from fungi are not very common to be found, but there are several of them to tell us part of the history of the fungi on Earth.
Jun 5 / Aishwarya Veerabahu
The Midas Mushroom: Ecological Impacts of
the Invasive Golden Oyster Mushroom
Golden oyster mushrooms (GOM; Pleurotus citrinopileatus) have become the new friendly, neighborhood, easily found, edible mushroom- but are they friendly neighbors to local fungi? In this talk, we’ll discuss our findings regarding GOM’s negative impacts, where it could spread to next, and how you all can help out with the research moving forward!
May 22 / Ryan Stephens
Mammals, Truffles, and Trees: Linking Above- and Below-ground Interactions
Many fungal taxa have evolved to fruit belowground (truffles) and require animals, particularly small mammals,to consume and disperse spores. This is a key mutualistic interaction where in exchange for providing spore dispersal, small mammals get an important food source. Focusing on communities from the Northeastern and Midwestern USA, this talk will discuss the factors that shape the interactions between truffles and small mammals, and the drivers of mammal-mediated fungal spore dispersal across spatial scales, including the role of predators as secondary dispersers.

May 22 / Eyes Big as Plates: Dressing for the Kingdom of Flora, Fauna, and Funga
Riitta Ikonen and Karoline Hjorth will present an in-depth exploration of their award winning 14-year collaboration, Eyes as Big as Plates. They have traveled across five continents and 17 countries, using a blend of art and action research to ask the question, “What is nature?” The duo works with complementing skills through photography, wearable sculpture and text, with a core mission to highlight dialogue on radical system change on interspecies relations.
Please use passcode 6@$Vck9. to access the zoom recording. Note that the period at the end is part of the code.

May 8 / Jonathan Gewirtzman
The Hidden Life Inside Trees
Trees are more than just plants—they host distinct and highly specialized microbial communities within their wood. Deep in the oxygen-limited heartwood, fungi, bacteria, and archaea form unique ecosystems, shaping tree health and even contributing to methane production. This talk explores how these microbiomes vary across tree species and tissues, their interactions, and their surprising role in forest biogeochemistry.

May 4 / Jacob Heilmann-Clausen
Combining Citizen Science, Traditional Taxonomy and Barcoding to Expand Knowledge on Fungal Biodiversity in Denmark – and Beyond
Jacob talks to us on The Danish Fungal Atlas (https://svampe.databasen.org/) and their new European project Fun Dive on fungal monitoring and mapping (https://fun-dive.eu/).

Apr 29 / Dr. Cathy L. Cripps
What we learned from the Montana Morel Poisonings in 2023: Are morels really safe to eat?

Apr 27 / Benton Taylor
Mycorrhizal Fungi Supporting Forests of the Future

Mar 27 / Don Pfister
Fungaria and the MycoPortal
Fungaria are central to the study of fungi. They provide the physical evidence needed to describe a species morphologically; in many cases DNA sequences can be obtained from deposited material. The importance of depositing specimens in phylogenetic and genomic studies is essential. In this talk I will outline the general use and guidelines practiced in the administration of fungaria and how this relates to databases and Mycoportal in particular.

Mar 13 / Patricia Ononiwu Kaishian
Mary Elizabeth Banning
Mary Elizabeth Banning (1822-1903) was one of the first American mycologists. She was a talented, self-taught scientist who studied mushrooms in Maryland in themid-1800s. Banning was one of the first women to describe new species of fungi to science. Throughout her life, she produced scientific descriptions, beautiful illustrations, and rich narratives about her fungal encounters. On account of her gender, however, Banning’s work and talent went underappreciated in her lifetime, and her name was lost to obscurity for almost a century. This talk will celebrate her contribution to science and mycology through an exploration of her illustrations, taxonomic work, and story-telling, drawing from the collections at the New York State Museum.

Feb 20 / Madeline DeDe-Panken
19th-Century Field Fights:How The Rise of Popular Mycology Made Foraging White

Feb 6 / Eugenia Bone:
Bumps in the Road: The Challenges of Mainstreaming Magic Mushrooms
Many people in psychedelic advocacy see psilocybin, the psychoactive molecule in many Psilocybe species, as having the potential to improve mental health and enhance spirituality. They ask what could possibly be problematic about legalizing and medicalizing a drug which might do so much good? It turns out fitting magic mushrooms into our medical, legal, and commercial models is like trying to put a round peg into a square hole. I’ll break down some of the most significant bumps in the road to mainstreaming magic mushrooms use.
