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Why Some Mushrooms Glow in the Dark



Dunlap and colleagues from the University of São Paulo in Brazil have shown in a new study that the mushrooms emit light only during the night, with a peak intensity occurring about 10 p.m. This corresponds to a period of high activity among flies and flying insects, which congregate near these glowing mushrooms, Dunlap says. The scientists think that this is beneficial for the mushrooms because when the insects land on and brush up against the fungi, they pick up its spores and then spread them to new places when they fly elsewhere. Spores can then germinate when they land in other suitable locations. “Bioluminescence is a tool the mushrooms use to make themselves interesting to insects, which take their spores place to place,” Dunlap says. March 19 http://www.newsweek.com/why-some-mushrooms-glow-dark-315194








This news comes in on the eve of the Solar Eclipse of March 20. A chart drawn for the eclipse at Sao Paulo has it placed very significantly on the Ascendant square the TNPs Kronos-Hades on the fourth house cusp. The fourth house  rules land as well as the produce of the land [1] which would include plants that grow on the land. Kronos-Hades form a Grand Trine with Neptune and the TNP Poseidon [2].

Kronos: fame or prominence

Poseidon: Light

Kronos-Poseidon: to achieve prominence through the emission of light.






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