What Mycelium Is
Mycelium is the vegetative body of a fungus. It consists of hyphae: branching, thread-like filaments that grow through soil, wood, and organic matter. A single cubic centimetre of forest soil can contain over 100 metres of fungal hyphae. The mushroom you see above ground is the reproductive structure, the fruiting body. The organism itself lives below.
Hyphae are made primarily of chitin, the same structural polymer found in insect exoskeletons and crustacean shells. Chitin-glucan complexes in the cell wall give mycelium its tensile strength, which is why it functions as a building material, not just a biological curiosity. A single mycelial network can span hectares and persist for centuries.
Fungi are not plants. They do not photosynthesize. They are heterotrophs: they break down organic matter externally using secreted enzymes, then absorb the released nutrients through their hyphae. This makes them the planet's primary decomposers. Without fungi, dead plant matter would accumulate indefinitely. Forests would choke on their own debris.
There are an estimated 2.2 to 3.8 million fungal species on Earth. Fewer than 150,000 have been formally described. The kingdom Fungi is closer to animals than to plants on the evolutionary tree. This is not a metaphor. Fungi and animals share a common ancestor that diverged roughly one billion years ago, long after the plant lineage had already separated.