Incredible AMBER FUNGAL FOSSIL Display Specimen

Name: Amber with Fungi

Age: Pleistocene to Pliocene

Size: mm (25.4mm=1 inch): 120 by 65 by 35; 139 grams

Location: Andes mountains in Colombia

Code: a94

Price: $175.00 - Sold


This amber specimen is an incredibly aesthetic rendering by nature. What circumstances led to the formation of this beautiful piece of amber? What interactions between plant, bacterial pathogens and fungi took place in an ancient rainforest? There is much science involved (see below), and much natural beauty is the result you see in the pictures. Regardless, this huge amber, roughly measuring 120 by 65 by 35 and weighing 139 grams, is chock full of off-white, fluffy, fungal fossil presenting as sheet- and filament-like structures. Pictures of the whole piece are shown with and without fiber-optic illumination to depict what beauty is possible with some creative display lighting. This specimen can well serve as either an addition to an amber collection or as beautiful home or office decorator item.

The great tree of life organizes all living organisms into three domains: Bacteria, Archaea, and Eucarya. It is only the Eucarya that have cells with nuclei that contain the genetic material, or genome. Eucarya, in turn, are organized into five broad Kingdoms: Animalia (Metazoans), Plantae, Chromista, Protista and Fungi.

While most people harbor a negative view of fungi, they actually comprise beneficial organisms. We can thank them for many antibiotics, including penicillin, for leavened bread, Roquefort cheese, beer, wine and other alcoholic beverages, and some mushrooms. More importantly, fungi are essential players in many of the mutually beneficial interaction of life forms (mutualistic symbiosis). Interactions between plants and fungi can either be beneficial and/or detrimental to the host plant. A beneficial interaction between plant and fungi is represented by the arbuscular mycorrhizal, fungus-plant symbiosis. The interaction represents an ancient association that is beneficial to the host plant by enhancing absorption of mineral nutrition and increasing plant tolerance to biotic and abiotic stresses. The interaction is invaluable to the fungus by their obtaining carbon from the plant essential for their lifecycle. Unlike animals, fungi digest their food before ingesting it.


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