» Kathie Hodge
![Puccinia minutissima on Decodon](https://blog.mycology.cornell.edu/files/2018/11/Decodon-gall-Ryan_Wicks-feature-1l2zirn-120x91.jpg)
Connecting the Rusts
Rust fungi are formidable plant pathogens that have big impacts in agriculture and natural ecosystems. Plant pathologist J.C. Arthur took up the great challenge of figuring out their life cycles.
![Astraeus morganii](https://blog.mycology.cornell.edu/files/2014/04/earthstar-still-Img00091-rmcrlw.jpg)
Twinkly earthstars
Fungi are secretive and elusive things. It’s hard to get to know them. They expose themselves shyly, briefly, and often bafflingly. Like these twinkly earthstars, which are hiding more than one secret.
![](https://blog.mycology.cornell.edu/files/2014/01/Hesperomyces-virescens-feature-yizde9.jpg)
Ladybug Fungi
They may be taking over the world, but they have problems too: They have an itch they can’t scratch. Their dead wear fur coats. They nuke their competitors with poisonous blood. Multicolored Asian ladybugs are host to three different fungi. They’re all bizarre and interesting, but if you are a ladybug, you will have a clear favorite.
![](https://blog.mycology.cornell.edu/files/2013/12/Rsubnigricans-FofJapan-rum5fa-120x72.jpg)
A deadly Russula
My students think of Russula species as cheerful mushrooms that are quite benign. They are often pleasingly colored, make good partners for trees, and have an interesting, brittle texture. Other than being practically impossible to identify, what’s not to like? But in eastern Asia, one Russula species kills half of the people who eat it.
![Amazon mystery tongue, by Jens H. Petersen](https://blog.mycology.cornell.edu/files/2013/12/amazon-mystery-tongue-o9mwn4-120x91.jpg)
Learning fungi
Fungi can be so unfamiliar in all their diverse forms and weird habits. Here’s a beautiful coffee table book to help you grasp the enormous diversity of the kingdom Fungi.
![](https://blog.mycology.cornell.edu/files/2013/11/feature462-208cigl.jpg)
How fungi grew on Cesalpino
Cesalpino would not have been surprised to find mold growing on his own book, published in 1583. However, he would have disagreed with us about the nature of fungi and where they come from. Also, if fungi have souls, where do they keep them?
![](https://blog.mycology.cornell.edu/files/2013/08/Eames_legs_chanterelles462-1a9io9i.jpg)
The Cornell Hoot
On the origins and practice of the Cornell Hoot, a mycological finding tool. Executing the Cornell Hoot is sure to make you find more mushrooms, grow more hair, make more friends (of a certain kind), and stay safely found.
![](https://blog.mycology.cornell.edu/files/2013/07/Exobasidium-vaccinii-1-27mmmu3-120x91.jpg)
Azalea divinity
Sure, azaleas have pretty flowers. But who says gardens have to be about pretty flowers and tasty fruit? Cornell has one garden devoted to poisonous plants, and any mycologist-gardener might cherish a bed of rusty plants, smutted grasses, and these fantastic fungus-induced “apples.”
![Woolly mammoths, from art by Mauricio_Antón](https://blog.mycology.cornell.edu/files/2013/06/Woolly_mammoth_Mammuthus_primigenius_-_Mauricio_Antón-1qhe5r5-120x72.jpg)
Mammoth Poo Fungi
Woolly mammoths have been extinct in North America for 13,000 years. What caused their extinction, and what did they eat for a snack? These two questions are related to each other only by… Fungi! Also, bonus! we explore the many words for poo.