Ghost Fungus Bioluminescence — New South Wales Australia
The ghost fungus (Omphalotus nidiformis) — an Australian bioluminescent mushroom whose entire fruiting body glows a ghostly blue-green in complete darkness through a chemical reaction involving luciferase enzyme and molecular oxygen — grows in dense clusters on dead and dying eucalyptus logs in southeastern Australian forests from March through July. In the Otway Ranges and Blue Mountains National Park, ghost fungus clusters are large enough (individual fruiting bodies up to 20 centimetres, clusters of 30–50 bodies) to illuminate the surrounding leaf litter visibly without a torch. Night photography of ghost fungus clusters, with the forest floor glowing blue-green and the tree trunks catching the reflected bioluminescence, produces some of Australia's finest and most unusual forest photography. The ghost fungus is toxic (the bioluminescence is not a warning signal — it appears to be a non-adaptive byproduct of metabolic chemistry), adding a 'do not eat' dimension to an encounter of genuine visual beauty.
About this spectacle
In the Otway Ranges and Blue Mountains National Park, the ghost fungus (Omphalotus nidiformis) transforms the forest floor into something otherworldly after dark. Dense clusters of 30–50 fruiting bodies — each up to 20 centimetres across — emit a sustained blue-green glow through a luciferase-driven chemical reaction, visibly illuminating surrounding leaf litter without any artificial light. Standing in complete darkness as eucalyptus logs pulse with cold bioluminescent light is a profoundly quiet, disorienting experience; the glow is steady rather than flickering, and the reflected light catches the underside of bark and ferns in a soft, spectral wash. Clusters can be encountered as your eyes adjust, appearing at first like faint smears of light among the roots. Long-exposure photography reveals layers of luminosity invisible to the naked eye, making these sites exceptional for night forest photography. The fungus grows on dead and dying eucalypts, so the visual focus is always ground-level — a crawling, glowing world underfoot. The toxicity of the fruiting body adds a 'look but do not touch' dimension to an already surreal encounter.
When to go
Mar — Jul
Getting there
Nearest airport: MEL. Nearest city: Geelong.
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