Fungi, Zombies and Climate Change: What’s the Link?

Close-up of mushroom toadstools. Photo by Marco Allegretti on Unsplash

If you haven’t yet seen “The Last of Us” – the hit HBO series depicting a zombie apocalypse fueled by a global fungal pandemic – then check it out because along with the help of an expert, we’re going to unpack how and whether it could actually happen. But don’t worry, no spoilers!

by Lauren Richards

February 19, 2023

Fungi are everywhere, and whether you realise it or not – or whether their presence brings human benefit or infection – these microorganisms are a frequent feature of everyday life. 

They’re in the kitchen, from the yeast that ferments the beer, bread and wine served at your favourite restaurant, to the mould that will soon appear on the food in your fridge, which you really should have stayed in and eaten instead. Precious Italian white truffle sprinkled on pasta in Piedmont is also a fungus, as is the mushroom that makes up the meat alternativesyou buy in the supermarket. 

They’re also in your closet, woven into that vegan leather jacket, your Adidas Stan Smith’s, lululemon leggings and even your yoga mat – if the items bought from these brands come from their mycelium or “mylo” ranges, they’re made of fungus. 

They’re also of course, in the wild, where these microorganisms play a key role in the forest microbiome and biodiversity, even helping to capture carbon from the atmosphere and sequester it in the soil. A power which many climate biotechs and NGOs are now trying to harness to help tackle the climate crisis. 

As such, human co-existence with fungi is, in many ways, harmonious, and more than that, there’s even a myriad of benefits to be bestowed by exploring this relationship further. 

But what must not be forgotten, is that much like bacteria, although there are certainly many “good” fungi out there, there are also plenty which are considered “bad.” Most notably – without taking into account the poisonous or hallucinogenic edible varieties – the many fungal pathogens that cause invasive infection and pose a serious threat to global human health.

1 Cup Before Breakfast Chews Up Heavy Fat

It’s this hostile framing of fungi that’s currently on your screen – or if it’s not, it should be – in the form of the hit HBO series The Last of Us,” which depicts the survival of a man and his 14-year-old sidekick in a post-apocalyptic world decimated by a fungal pandemic. In the dystopian world presented, infected victims are disturbingly agile, unduly angry and worst of all, zombie-like – there’s a lot of biting.  

The main premise of the show is that a previously harmless fungus known as “cordyceps”has mutated to become a heat-resistant and highly infectious pathogen, as its newly-evolved capabilities allow it to infect humans and wreak havoc. 

If you haven’t seen the show, you might wonder what (in this fictional depiction) drove the fungus to evolve in this unprecedented way. The answer is the very non-fictional crisis that the world is currently grappling with every day: climate change. 

What’s more, the inspiration for the HBO horror was in fact taken from a very real brain-eating Cordyceps fungus that infects antsThis fungus does not infect humans in reality, but it is widely used in Chinese traditional medicine.

When ants are infected with cordyceps spores, the insects are essentially “hijacked” by the fungus, which is then able to control their behaviour and every move – rendering them “zombie-like” – compelling them to leave their nest in search of fungus-favourable conditions that will allow the microbe to incubate and multiply as the ant slowly dies. 

Sony PlayStation Store 110 - Sony, [Digital]

Soon after the ant’s death, a fungal fruiting body blooms from the ant’s head, optimally poised to disperse the newly-formed spores and infect more ants – much like the finger-like fungus that creepily extends from the zombies’ mouths in the show.

We already know that climate change is capable of melting the Arctic ice caps and resurfacing 50,000-year-old time capsules of ancient “zombie viruses,” revealing that what was once frozen dormant, deep within the permafrost for millennia, now poses a serious hostile risk to global health.

But could our warming world also hold the potential to force evolution within the many fungal varieties that we currently co-exist on Earth with? Or is “The Last of Us”…

Just another zombie show? 

Mild fungal infections are not uncommon. In fact, millions of people regularly suffer the irritating, but non-life-threatening symptoms of fungal skin infections such as athlete’s foot, dandruff, thrush or ringworm, every day. 

But for individuals that are immunocompromised in some way, fungal pathogens can be deadly, and the incidence and geographic range of such invasive fungal infections are on the rise. 

Despite the global lack of attention and resources directed to tackle these devastating outbreaks, fungi are now responsible for 300 million infections and 1.5 million deaths each year.

To address both the escalation in risk and patent lack of awareness, in October last year, the World Health Organisation (WHO) published a report cataloguing its first-ever fungal priority pathogens list (FPPL) – a list of 19 fungal organisms that pose the greatest threat to global public health.  

“Fungal pathogens are a major threat to public health as they are becoming increasingly common and resistant to treatment,” stated WHO.

The report outlines how common fungal infections – such as oral and vaginal thrush caused by candida albicans – are becoming increasingly resistant to traditional antifungal treatments. WHO also highlights the growing risk that these relatively harmless microbes may soon become capable of causing more dangerous and invasive forms of infection. 

“Emerging from the shadows of the bacterial antimicrobial resistance pandemic, fungal infections are growing, and are ever more resistant to treatments, becoming a public health concern worldwide,” said WHO Assistant Director-General, Dr Hanan Balkhy.

Earlier this month, Nature Microbiology also showed support for WHO’s message, publishing a review by two professors and mycology experts who hailed the report as a “game-changer.” 

The authors of the review stressed the critical importance of WHO’s new fungal warning list, stating an urgent global necessity to better address the diagnosis and treatment of fungal outbreaks across the world. 

Most concerningly, both WHO and the Nature authors cited global warming and increased international travel and trade as the main culprits responsible for the escalating risk posed by existing and evolving fungal pathogens. 

Now, this doesn’t mean we’re expecting swarms of spore-spewing zombies to plague the streets any time soon. But what these publications do shine a spotlight on, is that the reality presented in “The Last of Us” might not be too far removed from a version of the future world we’re headed for, if we fail to curb the emerging threat of fungal pathogens on the global population. 

Is the show therefore perhaps…

Free Domain Privacy

More like a metaphorical glimpse of the future?

We asked Professor David Denning, one of the Nature paper’s authors, Professor of Infectious Diseases in Global Health at Manchester University, and Founder of the National Aspergillosis Centre and Global Action for Fungal Infections (GAFFI), a few questions about how realistic the fungal threat depicted in the show really is. 

We started off by asking Prof. Denning to what extent he expects fungal pathogens to acquire heat resistance as they evolve under the environmental pressures of climate change. He responded by telling Impakter that “Fungi are very adaptable.”

In fact, “Candida auris [a lethal bloodstream infecting, and largely drug-resistant fungus] may well have emerged because of global climate changes,” Denning told us. 

We also asked Prof. Denning whether he thought it was possible that the incidence of fungal outbreaks could escalate to pandemic levels, similar to the scenarios seen in “The Last of Us” (minus the zombie element of course). He told us that “cases of fungal disease are already grossly under-diagnosed. So they appear rare, when in actuality they are uncommon, but not rare.” 

“We already see hospital outbreaks all over the world, some related to poor hospital hygiene and infection control practice, some related to hospital construction, some related to patient-to-patient transmission… So major outbreaks are possible, especially in vulnerable patients,” said Denning. 

When asked whether he expects the threat posed by fungi to increase as the climate crisis worsens, Denning responded, “Yes,” but “to what extent is difficult to forecast.” 

He also highlighted the increasing environmental risk posed by fungi, stating that “90% of plant diseases are fungal, with significant losses in food crops and also trees,” listing bananas, frogs, and entire forests as being at risk from fungal-related diseases, death or evenextinction. 

Denning’s comments patently highlight the central message of both the WHO report and his own nature paper: Not enough global attention is being focused on the rising incidence of fungal infections. 

In fact, many cases go under the radar, concealing the reality of the threat these microbes pose to humanity – a threat which is only expected to intensify as fungal organisms continue to evolve in line with rising temperatures. 

Therefore, an immediate global-scale response is required to address the underestimated epidemic of newly-invasive fungal pathogens, lest we risk jeopardising the present and future health of the planet. 

Climate change and zombies

What we absolutely should not conclude from the parallel drawn between the flesh-eating scenes in “The Last of Us” and the closer-to-home threat of global warming-induced fungal mutation, is that climate change is in any way likely to cause an outbreak of zombies.  

So stop doomsday prepping right now. 

What is real, however, is that as global temperatures rise, the hand of natural selection will be forced to select those microorganisms that are genetically better equipped to withstand warmer temperatures. 

As this happens, fungi are likely to evolve to become more heat resistant and ultimately more capable of infecting humans – hosts within which their proteins would previously have been denatured before they were able to cause any harm. 

Therefore, though we’re not expecting to deal with the living dead, we should be fully prepared to tackle the emergence of a climate-fueled global fungal pandemic, much like we see in “The Last of Us.” 

What does this mean for the future of global health? Well, given that it’s also true that antimicrobial resistance is rising and there’s a severe lack of quality fungal diagnostic tests and treatments at present, urgent action is required to surveil and address the emerging global fungal crisis that seems to be going under the radar. 

“Better diagnostics is the key to getting on top of fungal disease,” Denning told Impakter, adding that “we also need to track antifungal resistance better than we are currently doing.”

In the Nature paper Denning co-authored alongside Professor Matthew Fisher, also an expert in pathogenic fungi from the MRC Centre for Global Infectious Disease Analysis, Imperial College, London, the pair highlight the importance of a One Health” approach to tackling worldwide fungal infections.

They cite the increased use of broad-spectrum fungicides in farming and agriculture as a possible factor that has “potentiated the emergence of newly emerging fungal pathogens,” and urge that the inappropriate use of antimicrobials must be phased-out. 

Reinforcing the urgent message of WHO’s fungi red list report, Denning and Fisher also emphasise the need for global and national policy change, wide-scale public health interventions and an international push for investment and innovation in developing higher-quality, and more widely accessible detections and treatments for invasive fungal infections.  

“Forewarned is forearmed,” state the authors, also underlining the fact that for every one of the 19 fungal pathogens listed in WHO’s report, “no vaccine is available.”

Just in case you’ve seen “The Last of Us,” and upon reading this article are now acutely concerned about the impending zombie apocalypse, rest assured that no cordyceps are featured on WHO’s list of life-threatening fungi.

But all jokes aside, what should resonate as you read this, is the reality of the outstandingly unmet public-health issue that is emerging as fungi evolve as a result of human misuse of resources – in more ways than one – and that this crisis urgently requires global attention. 

Subscribe to our newsletter.

Once again we’re reminded that curbing climate change is not only important to protect the environment, but also to protect humans from the hostilities that lie within it.

This article was originally published on IMPAKTER. Read the original article.

0 Shares