Like a nightmarish, post-apocalyptic plot, rising temperatures are causing fungi to mutate in ways that not only make them hyper-infectious but drug-resistant, too.

This is deeply concerning as our world warms, Nanjing Medical University researcher Jingjing Huang and colleagues warn.

“The danger and importance of new fungal pathogens is believed to be seriously underestimated,” they write in their new paper.

“Temperature-dependent mutagenesis can enable the development of pan-drug resistance and hypervirulence in fungi, and support the idea that global warming can promote the evolution of new fungal pathogens.”

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7 points

Yes. Very humid. Our air is basically mold spores.

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4 points

Could you use a dehumidifier with a filter?

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6 points

It’s not the humidity inside. It’s the humidity outside. Every air quality report in this area has mold at the highest levels 8 months out of the year. It’s unavoidable. Our air quality is so bad that when you travel to other parts of the country you can feel a difference in your breathing. People I this area have a statistically higher rate of lung diseases.

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2 points

Oh I see. That’s a hard problem to address.

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