Overview
In informal terms there are three major groups of fungi:
- moulds (filamentous fungi that might be found growing on something old at the back of the fridge);
- yeasts (unicellular organisms that in nature form the blooms on fruit like grapes and are used to make bread and beer);
- mushroom fungi (which make the most complex fruit bodies comprised of several distinctively differentiated tissues; including the cultivated ('button') mushroom, shiitake, oyster mushroom, etc.).
Whilst they all have different properties, they generally all share the key feature of the fungal lifestyle, which is the ability to decay organic matter as a means of accessing the nutrients that waste materials contain (saprotrophism).
In fact 
      the recycling ability of fungi is the area that holds the prime interest 
      for scientists today. Lignin is one of three components of 
      plant cell walls (the others being cellulose and hemicellulose), 
      and is a complex polymer which provides the strength and support 
       in the secondary growth of perennial plants like bushes and trees; it is part of the woody tissue that makes timber as we know it. However, lignin is a complex polyphenolic; whilst 
      it is of great use to all plants, it is a major problem
      for most  microorganisms that try to access the nutrients 
      inside the plant, but are foiled by the phenolic antiseptics released by any attempt to degrade its lignocellulose protective  barrier. In 
      fact, there is only one type of microorganism that can degrade 
      lignin…and , yes, you guessed it…it's the fungi.
 In fact 
      it is mainly the basidiomycetes that make up a group known as the white rot fungi, and this amazing ability is where 
      the focus of research is taking place today. The potential that is offered by 
      these fungi is enormous; lignin and its related lignocellulose structures are 
      abundant around the world. Alongside the crops it produces, the agricultural industry generates enormous quantities of lignocellulose wastes. From a field of corn only the grain is used, from a field of rape only the oil of the seed; the rest is waste which can be a  source of 
      pollution but could be recycled for the energy it contains. But while lignin 
      degradation is important, it is the similarity of lignin to other 
      chemical structures that offers even greater potential to scientists and 
      environmentalists worldwide.
      
      There 
      are many sources of pollution in the world today, but one of the 
      worst is the category known as organopollutants, which are chemicals that persist in the 
      environment for a long time and hold many dangers for humans and 
      animals. Examples are pesticides like DDT (supposedly prohibited 
      in use worldwide), and the wood preservative creosote. These 
      organopollutants share structural similarities to lignin, in particular the number of phenolic residues in the structure, and 
      the enzymes that fungi produce to degrade the phenolic residues of lignin are what scientists are exploiting to degrade 
      these organopollutants. 
      
      These are the fungi for the future.
Further information about bioremediation can be found in chapters 13 and 17 of the new textbook 21st Century Guidebook to Fungi by David Moore, Geoffrey D. Robson & Anthony P.J. Trinci, published 2011 by Cambridge University Press: ISBN: 9780521186957. URL: ttp://www.cambridge.org/gb/knowledge/isbn/item6026594/?site_locale=en_GB. View Amazon page.
Updated December 15, 2016






