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If I were to ask you what's the largest thing to have ever lived on planet earth, most people
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would say... THE BLUE WHALE OF COURSE! But, despite popular belief... it's not!
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So, what on earth... is or should I say was?
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I'm Stu, this is Debunked, and we're here to sort the truth from the myths and the facts
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from the misconceptions.
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Okay, so if the Blue Whale sets the benchmark by which all other living creatures are measured,
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it probably makes sense to first establish just how BIG a Blue Whale can get?
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The biggest one ever discovered was found in the Southern Ocean of Antarctica back in
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1947. it weighed in at a hefty 190 metric tons (209.4 US TONS / 418,878 lb),
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which is the equivalent to 104 standard family SUVs. It also measured a huge 27.6 meters
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(90 ft 6 in) long, close to the length of a short haul airliner (Airbus 318)
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and its estimated volume was roughly the size of 7 fuel trucks, at 223 cubic meters (7875
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feet3). Remember that for later…
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What could possibly out-size something this massive?
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Well, whales first appeared around 40 million years ago, so to find out what could possibly
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top such a titan,
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it would make sense to take a look at this prehistoric era of Earth's history,
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when great monstrous-sized beasts walked the planet,
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plants were the size of VWs and colossal creatures swam in our oceans.
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So, let's start with dinosaurs... or more accurately Titanosaurs
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- a group of four legged veggiesaurus' with long tails and small heads.
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The largest of these dinosaurs to have ever walked the Earth is believed to be the Argentinosaurus.
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Its discovery in the 1990s stunned paleontologists the world over,
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with a length of 35 meters and a weight of 70 metric tons (tonnes / 70,000kg)!
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Put this next to most people's common point of dino sized reference - the T-Rex, and it
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dwarfs the goat eating carnivore.
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However the title was hotly contended in 2017 by the discovery of the Patagotitan mayorum.
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This titanosaur was believed to have a skeleton 10% larger than the Argentinosaurus,
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but recent weight estimations put it just shy at 69 tonnes.
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Both Titanosaurs maybe longer than the whale, but put the Argentinosaurus
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and the Patagotitan on a set of scales and the pair together wouldn't out weigh our
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big blue heffer.
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----
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In fact, Whales are so much larger because they live in the ocean.
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On land, animals suffer the full effect of gravity, but for sea based organisms;
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the water's buoyancy reduces the strain on their muscles and skeletons, allowing them
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to grow to such vast sizes.
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When something as huge as a blue whale becomes beached or stranded on land,
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their muscles can't support their body weight out the water and they will basically be crushed
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to death under their own weight.
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So with the ocean providing the best environment for a creature to super-size itself,
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let's take a look in to the deep blue, and more specifically the Cretaceous period to
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see what competition there would have been...
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Now anyone who's witnessed this scene before will surely think that this prehistoric monster
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offers some competition for a Blue Whale?
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That, is a Mosasaur…
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and THAT is a GREAT WHITE SHARK serving as an amuse bouche.
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Now, if this is your average sized Great White then the Mosasaur would make up the length
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of about 9 of these sharks.
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With your average Great White measuring in at 5.3 meters, that means the Mosasaur measures
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in at nearly 48 METERS!
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And this is how our Blue Whale sizes up against this leviathan!
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But here's where Hollywood gets carried away with itself…
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Mosasaurs aren't believed to have grown any longer than 18 meters,
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with the largest one to have been excavated sitting at a modest 15 meters,
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meaning Jurassic World's reptile is grotesquely inaccurate.
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Anyway that's enough science fiction, let's get back to the science fact.
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What is the largest creature to have ever swam in our oceans?, Fortunately, a discovery
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in 2018 may have the answer.
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Measuring in at nearly 26 meters, that's only just short of our largest blue whale,
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it's believed that this giant Ichthyosaur may have been the largest aquatic reptile
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ever!
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However, with its dolphin-like shape, a long pointy jaw and streamlined body, it's estimated
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weight falls far below that of the Whale,
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meaning the Blue Whale still stands as the largest animal to have ever swam in our planet's
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waters.
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Let's leave the wet stuff behind now and head back to land,
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where the competition to be crowned largest living thing is starting to hot up.
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What stands taller than the largest dinosaurs and doesn't suffer the effect of gravity
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like other living, breathing organisms?
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The trees…
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As we travel to the coast of California, we'll find the Redwoods National Park,
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and here you'll see, Hyperion!
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Even fantasy doesn't top this living behemoth, take a recent incarnation of Godzilla and
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put it next to the Sequoia,
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and it stands around 10% taller at a staggering 115.85 meters!
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And if Godzilla's not your thing then take a look at how the Statue Of Liberty sizes
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up!
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Yet, height isn't everything, we're after the largest and that doesn't necessarily
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mean the tallest, so for that we need to travel down the coast to meet General Sherman,
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a 2,100 year old Giant Sequoia. He may stand at a humble 82.6 meters (271 ft) tall by comparison,
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but has a whopping volume of 1,487 cubic meters (52,513 cubic feet),
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blowing old Bluey out of the water! Because in fact you could squeeze around 7 blue whales
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inside this tree.
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When the General's root system is taken in to account it's believed that this single
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organism would weigh 1,814 tonnes (4,000,000 lb)!
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And, as astounding as those stats are, there was once a tree larger than the General
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, measuring 1,727 cubic meters, but it was sadly cut down in the 1940s.
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However, even with these giants of the forest,
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believe it or not we've still not found the largest thing to have ever lived on our
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planet…
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To find what we're looking for, we need to travel to the Blue Mountains Of Eastern
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Oregon,
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and here you won't find the largest living organism towering over the forest,
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swimming through the lakes or stomping around the mountains.
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Instead, we need to look below our feet. Under the forest floor of the Malheur National Forest,
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you'll find something that you may not have expected to come out on top in this video.
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While we've been looking at all the relevant Kingdoms of Life on planet earth,
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there's one we're forgetting… Fungi (Fun-gee), OR Fungi (Fun-guy) or Fungi (Fun-jei),
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depending on where you're from!
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Here, on the ground, we find the Armillaria ostoyae, or more commonly known as the Honey
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Fungus.
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All that we generally see is the fruiting body, what we would consider a mushroom or
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toadstool.
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But this is often only 10% of a fungus, the rest of the organism, the vegetative part,
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is below the earth.
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To make this concept more familiar, imagine this as a fruit tree, and you'd see the
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leaves,
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branches and stems all below ground with only the fruit appearing above.
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This fungus however is no ally to trees. The Honey Fungus is actually devouring the forest
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from the ground up.
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Now most people won't think of fungi as tree killers,
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as they are in fact a cornerstone to the entire ecosystem of a forest,
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usually breaking down organic debris like fallen leaves and transferring essential minerals
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to the plants.
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Here, however, the Armillaria ostoyae has a much more parasitic purpose.
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It attaches itself to the forest's conifer trees and begins to feed off of their roots,
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killing the tree in the process.
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Nicknamed the Humongous Fungus, the wealth of trees in this area has enabled it to spread
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far and wide,
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and currently this fungi stretches across 2,200 acres or 8.9 square kilometers (3.4
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square miles) below the soil!
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To put what you are seeing here in to perspective, that is the equivalent...
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of around 1,700 NFL football fields, or 36,500 tennis courts.
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Now, the discovery of the Humongous Fungus sparked debate as to what constitutes a 'single
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living organism'.
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But it can be succinctly summed up by Biology Professor Tom Volk...
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Which is exactly what the Honey Fungus is, meaning this is indeed a single living organism,
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just like the Giant Sequoia or the Blue Whale.
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And it's not just the extensive area it covers that makes the Armillaria ostoyae so
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huge,
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it's discoverer James B. Anderson from the University of Toronto recently surveyed the
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site, and now estimates
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that if the entire fungus were dug up out of the ground and weighed,
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it would top the scales at 400 tonnes, more than double the heft of a Blue Whale!
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But, as with anything at this scale, it brings with it some controversy.
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There is another single organism spread over a vast area that is touting for the same title
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of Largest Living Organism.
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Head down to Utah and you'll find this huge tree…
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...nope back out a little… there. This, is one, tree.
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Known as the 'Trembling Giant' OR 'Pando' (Latin for “I, Spread.”)
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this entire grove of 47,000 Quaking Aspen trees has grown from a single root system.
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You see, Aspens find most success in regenerating 'vegetatively',
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meaning sprouting from roots (not from seedlings), this results in what's termed a 'clone'.
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Just like the Honey Fungus, this forest is genetically identical and it behaves as one
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organism.
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With the changing seasons, the whole forest changes color and sheds all its leaves in
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unison.
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And, most fascinatingly, as an old tree dies in the clonal grove, signals are sent from
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the tree out to the network of roots,
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which then stimulate new growth for the next generation to replace the old.
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Now this colony may look substantially more impressive than the humble honey Fungus,
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but... we're only looking at 106 acres.
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Less than 5%, of the area covered by the Fungus.
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So surely there's no competition? Well, the complications come when weight is included
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in the criteria.
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As we've learnt the Humongous Fungus weighs in at 400 tonnes, where as it's estimated
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that Pando smashes through that record weighing a colossal six… thousand tonnes!
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In fact the 'United States Department Of Agriculture' list the both Pando and the
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Humongous Fungus as the 'Largest Organism On Earth'
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So, surely the only way that this can be settled is to confirm it with the great holders of
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such titles,
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over at the Guinness World Records.
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Well no, the record for 'Largest Living Organism' seems so controversial that even
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Guiness haven't yet declared it.
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According to their records, Pando is confirmed as the 'Most Massive Plant'
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while the Honey Fungus holds the record for 'Largest Fungi'.
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The most common criteria, however, that declares anything as 'Largest' is specified under
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'Area Covered'.
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And under this, the Humungus Honey Fungus is the outright winner.
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Even if you took into account the total estimated volume of the two contenders
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then the Armillaria Ostoyae decimates the Quaking Aspen at more than double its size.
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Pando is however, believed to hold the slightly less grandiose record for
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'Largest Known Organism On Earth In Terms Of Dry-Weight Mass'
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as fungi are around 92% water. (Trees = 50% Water)
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On the other hand, the Humongous Fungus has increased in size with subsequent surveys,
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where as, sad but true, Pando is dying.
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It has substantially reduced over the past 70 years due to human interference.
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And, it's thought that within the next 10 to 20 years, up to 80% of the entire grove
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could collapse.
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Dr Paul Rogers, an Ecologist who recently led a conservation effort to protect Pando,
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has said...