Department of Geography, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, CB2 3EN, UK; Global Change Research Institute of the Czech Academy of Sciences (CzechGlobe), 603 00, Brno, Czech Republic; Department of Geography, Faculty of Science, Masaryk University, 611 37, Brno, Czech Republic; Swiss Federal Research Institute (WSL), 8903, Birmensdorf, Switzerland.
Swiss Federal Research Institute (WSL), 8903, Birmensdorf, Switzerland.
Fungal Biol. 2021 Dec;125(12):951-961. doi: 10.1016/j.funbio.2021.09.001. Epub 2021 Sep 3.
Despite its status as a highly-prized and coveted fungi in gastronomy, many aspects of the subterranean life cycle of the Burgundy truffle (Tuber aestivum) are still unknown, because in situ observations of the formation and maturation of truffle fruitbodies remain difficult. Here, we adopted a suite of archaeological fine-scale excavating techniques to provide unique spatiotemporal snapshots of Burgundy truffle growth at three sites in southern Germany. We also recorded the relative position, fresh weight, maturity level and genotype composition of all excavated fruitbodies. Varying by a factor of thousand, the fresh weight of 73 truffle ranged from 0.1 to 103.2 g, with individual maturity levels likely representing different life cycle stages from completely unripe to fully ripe and even decaying. While only a slightly positive relationship between fruitbody weight and maturity level was found, our results suggest that genetically distinct specimens can exhibit different life cycle stages at the same period of time and under the same environmental conditions. We therefore argue that truffles are likely able to grow, mature and ripe simultaneously between early summer and late winter of the following year. Our case study should encourage further eco-archaeological truffle excavations under different biogeographic settings and at different seasons of the year to gain deeper insights into the fungi's subterranean ecology. The expected cross-disciplinary findings will help truffle hunters and farmers to improve their harvest practices and management strategies.
尽管勃艮第块菌(Tuber aestivum)作为一种备受推崇和垂涎的美食真菌,但其地下生命周期的许多方面仍然未知,因为对块菌果实形成和成熟的原位观察仍然很困难。在这里,我们采用了一套考古学精细挖掘技术,在德国南部的三个地点提供了勃艮第块菌生长的独特时空快照。我们还记录了所有挖掘出的果实的相对位置、新鲜重量、成熟度水平和基因型组成。73 个块菌的新鲜重量变化幅度很大,从 0.1 到 103.2 g 不等,个体成熟度水平可能代表了从完全未成熟到完全成熟甚至腐烂的不同生命周期阶段。虽然发现果实重量和成熟度水平之间只有略微的正相关关系,但我们的结果表明,遗传上不同的标本在同一时期和相同的环境条件下可能表现出不同的生命周期阶段。因此,我们认为块菌可能能够在次年的初夏到隆冬之间同时生长、成熟和成熟。我们的案例研究应该鼓励在不同的生物地理背景下和一年中的不同季节进行进一步的生态考古块菌挖掘,以更深入地了解真菌的地下生态学。预期的跨学科发现将有助于块菌猎人和农民改进他们的收获实践和管理策略。