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Marine fungi could help feed the world and fight disease

Marine fungi could help feed the world and fight disease
A selection of marine fungi from the culture collection at the Marine Biological Association. Credit: Marine Biological Association

Fungi are nature's recyclers and chemists, turning waste into useful products and creating an array of enzymes and compounds. By harnessing this potential through fungal biotechnology (using fungi to develop products and technologies for various applications), we can create sustainable materials, food and processes that help solve global challenges like food shortages, pollution and climate change.

Fungal biotechnology supports a where resources are reused instead of wasted. Fungi can help make our more stable and eco-friendly, while cutting greenhouse gas emissions. But to fully unlock what is possible, we need to better understand different and develop new tools to work with them to find solutions.

The is home to a rich . However, marine fungi were once overlooked and not widely considered for their biotechnological potential.

Now, my team of scientists at the , a based in Plymouth on the south-west coast of England, has changed that. By gathering over 500 fungal strains from seawater, sediments and , we have created a comprehensive marine fungi culture collection.

These fungi are stored at -80°C and studied at temperatures similar to the local shoreline they are from. This unique collection is already helping us learn more about marine fungi, including and .

My colleagues and I are now exploring how these marine fungi, especially those from , can be used in biotechnology to create more useful, sustainable products in the future.

The European seaweed industry is growing fast and could be . Seaweed farming doesn't need land, or fertilizer, and it can support ocean health.

Marine fungi, especially those originally isolated from seaweed, could recycle seaweed into valuable products.

At the Marine Biological Association, we are testing many combinations of different seaweeds and fungi to discover new uses. This approach could help make the seaweed industry stronger, more efficient and better for the environment.

Marine fungi could help feed the world and fight disease
Growing fungi with toothed wrack seaweed ‘discs’ in the laboratory. Credit: Beth Tindall-Jones Marine Biological Association/University of Exeter

The future is fungal

Feeding the world's growing population is a major challenge, especially with nearly a billion people unable to afford and the environmental consequences of high meat consumption. One promising alternative protein source involves and fermenting it with marine fungi to create a nutritious protein source called mycoprotein—similar to what's found in some current commercial products.

—the development of superbugs that become resistant to antibiotics as a result of their overuse—is a global health threat. This makes it harder to treat infections. Fungi naturally produce chemicals to protect themselves from other microbes, and several antibiotics come from fungi, including penicillin. Marine fungi could be a valuable new source of antibiotics and drug treatments to fight resistant infections and protect public health.

Pests and the diseases they spread cause worldwide, . Traditional chemical pesticides are becoming less effective and can harm helpful species like pollinators, while also leading to pest resistance.

Scientists are now exploring by using microbes without damaging the environment. One promising but unexplored source is marine fungi. Marine fungi and the arsenal of chemical compounds they produce may hold the key to developing new, eco-friendly pest control methods that protect crops while supporting wildlife and sustainable farming practices.

Our marine fungi culture collection is helping unlock the potential for finding new solutions to many of the world's biggest challenges.

Provided by The Conversation

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Citation: Marine fungi could help feed the world and fight disease (2025, June 16) retrieved 26 October 2025 from /news/2025-06-marine-fungi-world-disease.html
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