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To Restore an Island Paradise, Add Fungi

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Why This Matters

The discovery of native fungi on Palmyra Atoll offers a promising new approach to ecological restoration by potentially accelerating the recovery of native trees like Pisonia. This advancement highlights the importance of microbiome research in conservation efforts, providing innovative solutions for restoring damaged ecosystems. Such techniques could influence future restoration projects worldwide, emphasizing the role of fungi in ecological resilience.

Key Takeaways

For the last two decades, conservationists on the remote Pacific atoll of Palmyra have been working to uproot invasive palm trees and restore native wildlife. A new study finds that native fungi could be instrumental to that process.

Palmyra Atoll, a U.S. territory, was stripped of its forests in the 19th century to plant palm trees for the production of coconut oil. Even after its plantations were abandoned, palms continued to dominate the atoll, displacing native trees. Further threatening wildlife was the inadvertent introduction by the U.S. military of black rats, which destroyed seedlings and ate seabird hatchlings and crabs.

Conservationists working with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service have since made great progress in undoing this damage. In 2011, they eradicated black rats, and by 2022, they had removed 1.5 million coconut palms. But to fully restore Palmyra’s native Pisonias, they may need the help of underground fungi that supply nutrients to trees.

When a team of researchers sampled the soil beneath Pisonia trees on Palmyra, they discovered rare mycorrhizal fungi, including several species found nowhere else on Earth. Scientists also identified several areas where fungi could be transplanted to give a boost to Pisonia seedlings. The findings were published in the journal Current Biology.