Trees have their own way of communicating: a network of roots found just beneath the forest floor. Through dense webs of microfilaments—called “mycelium.”
Exploring The Underground Network of Trees – The Nervous System of the Forest - Science in the News
forests of the underground': Why scientists want to map the world's fungi
Partnering With Fungi and Soil for Better Futures – The Nature of Cities
Mycorrhizal network - Wikipedia
The Wood Wide Web — An Darach Forest Therapy
The Super-Fungi – How fungi save our forest by using volatile organic compounds
Machine learning helps researchers identify underground fungal networks
Relationships Between Trees and Fungi in a Time of Climate Change · Frontiers for Young Minds
Frontiers Mycorrhizal Symbiosis for Better Adaptation of Trees to Abiotic Stress Caused by Climate Change in Temperate and Boreal Forests
Mycelium & Mycorrhizal: Forest Perks - Better Place Forests
The Wood Wide Web: Underground Fungi-Plant Communication Network – The Aggie Transcript
Do trees really stay in touch via a 'wood-wide web'? Here's what the evidence says
Suzanne Simard: How Do Trees Collaborate? : NPR
Mycorrhizal Networks: Hidden Forest Heroes