The Underground Social Network of Trees
Trees communicate through a massive underground 'Wood Wide Web' of fungi that trades nutrients and warnings.

A forest is not just a collection of trees; it is a single, massive intelligence connected by an underground web. Trees use a network of fungi called mycorrhizae to talk to one another and trade supplies.
This fungal thread connects the roots of different species across miles of soil. When a tree is attacked by beetles, it sends chemical 'data packets' through the network to warn its neighbors.
In response, the surrounding trees start pumping out toxins to prepare for the invasion before the bugs even arrive. Older 'Mother Trees' use the web to identify their own saplings and send them extra sugar to help them grow in the shade.
This isn't just a friendly exchange. The fungi take a 'tax' of about 30% of the tree’s sugar in exchange for providing minerals like phosphorus and nitrogen.
If a tree is dying, it can dump its remaining nutrients back into the network to be used by its survivors. It’s a literal biological socialist system hidden beneath your feet.
Some orchids have even figured out how to 'hack' the system, plugging into the web to steal nutrients without giving anything back.

The Forest That is Actually Just One Tree
In Utah, there is a forest of 47,000 trees that all share the exact same DNA and root system.
Read Next