The prized fungi known as truffles are fabulously expensive – a four-pound white truffle fetched $61,250 at a Sotheby’s auction last year – mainly because nobody has figured out how to farm this edible, wild mycorrhizal fungus cost-effectively.

However, Israeli agricultural researchers have successfully mass cultivated another form of mycorrhizal fungi as a natural method for boosting plant crop yield and nutrition.

“Simply put, our mission is to cover the world’s arable land with mycorrhiza,” says Groundwork BioAg cofounder and vice president of sales and marketing Dan Grotsky.

Groundwork’s Rootella is a desert-hardy, highly concentrated strain of mycorrhizal fungus that results from 25 years of breeding, research and field trials in cooperation with Israel’s Volcani Institute Agricultural Research Organization.

This “good” fungus extends plant roots by a factor of up to 100, allowing plants to better absorb water and soil nutrients from fertilizers and compost.

“As the plants get more nutrients, farmers get higher yield and that’s what counts most,” Grotsky tells ISRAEL21c. “Secondly, they save on water and fertilizers.”