YoungPost Club Learn
DOWNLOAD OUR APP
appstoregoogleplay
FIND US AT
My JourneyMy VocabularyMy Leaderboard
My AccountSearchAbout UsContact Us
Subscription Plan
School Subscription
YOUNG POST
NewsTrendingBeing wellLearning zoneShare with usQuizzes
SPARK
NewsTrendingBeing wellLearning zoneShare with usQuizzes
POSTIES
Big readEye on the newsHa-ha-happeningsThings to doYour saySteam studioHealth and happinessQuizzes
Subscribe to Young Post Club to access our great content
ABOUT US|CONTACT US|WRITE FOR US|PRIVACY POLICY|TERMS & CONDITIONS
©2025 Young Post Club. All rights reserved.
My Journey Hello
Brand Avatar
Young Post
My Journey illustration

With a subscription, you can answer quizzes and track your reading progress.

News / World / Environment

American scientist wins an environmental award for her research on fungi

Every year, fungi networks around the world help fight climate change by taking in 13 billion tonnes of carbon
byAgence France-Presse
Published: 8:00am, 31 Jan 2026
Length: 195 words
American scientist wins an environmental award for her research on fungi

Huge fungal webs live beneath the surface of forests, grasslands and farms across the world. Photo: AFP / Loreto Oyarte Galvez / Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam

Beneath forests and fields are large networks of mycorrhizal fungi that connect to plant roots. Fungi are a group of living things that includes mushrooms.

The fungi networks help plants by sharing food. They also help fight climate change. Every year, they take in 13 billion tonnes of carbon. This is about a third of total emissions from fossil fuels.

American scientist Toby Kiers studies these fungi, which are called mycorrhizal fungi. Last month, she won the Tyler Prize for Environmental Achievement for her research. The award is known as a “Nobel for the environment”.

Kiers and her team created a global map showing where mycorrhizal fungi are found.

Their group is called the Society for the Protection of Underground Networks. The group pushes for the protection of fungi, which are often ignored in conservation.

“Life as we know it exists because of fungi,” Kiers said.

IN THIS ARTICLE
Easy reading
Science
KEEP READING
cover
Stories
Spark Study Buddy (Challenger): Antifungal resistance – the big health threat
01 Jun 2025
cover
Stories
‘Unsung heroes’: Hundreds of fungi species could go extinct
14 Apr 2025
cover
Listening
5-minute listening: Itchy feet? The fun and not-so-fun world of fungi
09 Jan 2022