Headlines
  • The US Central Command (CENTCOM) denied reports that a US aircraft was shot down in Iran, which have been making the rounds in Iranian media.
  • US president Donald Trump is still not ready to sign the ceasefire extension deal, according to US Vice President JD Vance, who stated on Thursday that the US and Iran had made major progress toward it.
  • Benjamin Netanyahu, the prime minister of Israel, stated that his country wants to control 70% of the Gaza Strip.
  • Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the director general of the World Health Organization (WHO), arrived the Democratic Republic of the Congo late on Thursday.
  • After an explosion on Thursday, a large fire tore through an apartment building in Dallas, killing people, according to authorities.

More Details

Wildfire Destroys Prized Mushrooms, Income Source for Tibetans

The resulting matsutake shortage will hurt livelihoods and exports to Japan and South Korea.

By Tenzin Pema, Dorjee Damdul and Sonam Lhamo for RFA Tibetan

A Tibetan forages for matsutake mushrooms in an undated photo.Credit:Citizen journalist Via RFA

A recent wildfire in a Tibetan-populated area of China’s Sichuan province ravaged vast swathes of forests covered with pine and oak trees that nurtured a hidden treasure and an economic lifeline for residents — matsutake mushrooms. 

The wildfire that broke out in March in Nyagchu county, or Yajiang in Chinese, in Kardze Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, forced 3,000 people from the traditional Kham region of Tibet to evacuate the area and burned down several houses. No human casualties have been reported. 

But the fire destroyed about one-sixth of the county’s matsutake output, Chen Wen, director of the Yajiang Matsutake Industrial Park, told Chinese media.

The mushrooms, which Tibetans gather to supplement their income and others use in dishes in Japan, South Korea and China, may not grow again in the burned area for at least 20 years, he said.

Matsutake mushrooms, seen in this undated photo, are referred to as ‘oak mushrooms’ in a nod to their symbiotic relationship with evergreen oak trees in Tibet.Credit:Citizen journalist Via RFA

China is the world’s largest producer and exporter of matsutake mushrooms, exporting US$30.3 million in 2022, while Japan is the top importer, bringing in US$24.7 million that year.

The primary places where the mushrooms grow in China are within the Tibetan plateau, including in Nyagchu county, which accounted for more than 12% of China’s annual output, according to the Yajiang County Agriculture and Animal Husbandry Science and Technology Bureau. 

Demanding and lucrative

Many families in Nyagchu — where Tibetans make up the majority of the county’s population of over 51,000 — have for years braved the frigid mountain air to forage for the elusive mushrooms during the traditional harvest season between July and September. 

Foraging matsutake is a demanding if lucrative job with harvesters often spending weeks at high altitudes in harsh weather conditions to search for the mushrooms, said an area resident. Some varieties are rare and require meticulous searching, while others grow underground and require careful removal, he said.

“In one day, you can make more than 2,000 yuan (US$300) during the harvesting season,” said a source inside Tibet who requested anonymity for fear of reprisal.

Tibetans forage for matsutake mushrooms in this undated photo.Credit: Citizen journalist Via RFA

Residents believe that the impact of the fire may force some Tibetans to abandon matsutake harvesting and seek alternative sources of income in other areas.

But at a recent press conference on the impact of the wildfire, Sichuan provincial representatives did not mention the disaster’s potential effects on the livelihoods of Tibetans who rely on matsutake harvesting.

The fire also damaged the local ecosystem, killing birds and insects that play a role in the growth of the mushrooms, said an area resident, adding that the long-term ecological consequences of the blaze remain unclear.

“Nyagchu is renowned for its abundance of naturally grown matsutake, and the harvest is a crucial source of income for many Tibetan families in the county,” said Washington-based Tsering Palden, a native of Nyagchu, who has sold the mushrooms in the past. 

Palden estimates that area households earn about 200,000 yuan (US$28,000) annually from selling the mushrooms.

‘Oak mushrooms’

In Tibet, matsutake mushrooms are most commonly referred to as “oak mushrooms,” or beshing shamo and besha for short in Tibetan, in a nod to their symbiotic relationship with evergreen oak trees in Tibet. 

Matsutake mushrooms, seen in this undated photo, are a highly prized delicacy in many parts of Asia.Credit: Citizen journalist Via RFA

In his 2022 book “What a Mushroom Lives for: Matsutake and the Worlds They Make,” Michael Hathaway, professor of anthropology at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, Canada, describes how Tibetan villagers in Yunan province hunt for them.

The villagers gather the mushrooms in the morning and return home when dealers arrive at a market or drive along the roads, buying them as they go, he writes. The dealers then sell their matsutake to other dealers, who arrange for them to be shipped across China and to Japan and South Korea.

The price of matsutake mushrooms had jumped over the past 40 years from the equivalent of about US$1 per pound (2.2 kg) in 1985 to US$70 per pound, according to Beijing-based Tibetan writer and poet Tsering Woeser.

The mushrooms have specific environmental requirements for growth and thrive in undisturbed, high-altitude forests with the right balance of sgtvfbtxzunlight and moisture, said the source inside Tibet.

“The fire has disrupted these conditions and may take years for the ecosystem to recover sufficiently to support matsutake growth,” he added. 

Translated and edited by Tenzin Pema for RFA Tibetan. Edited by Roseanne Gerin and Malcolm Foster.

“Copyright © 1998-2023, RFA.
Used with the permission of Radio Free Asia,
2025 M St. NW, Suite 300, Washington, D.C. 20036.
https://www.rfa.org.”

Related Article

EXPLAINED: Why Taiwan Wants U.S. Weapons…

With Taiwan hoping for swift delivery of a US$14 billion weapons sale approved by the U.S. Congress ...
May 27, 2026

Satellite Imagery Shows New North Korea-Russia…

Satellite imagery has revealed that North Korea and Russia are scrambling to complete a new high-cap ...
May 22, 2026

Xi-Trump Talks Cast Fresh Spotlight on…

Chinese President Xi Jinping used his meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump last week to reiterat ...
May 20, 2026

‘Seismic Shift’ Toward Aussie Orbit Likely…

The Solomon Islands’ choice of longtime opposition leader Matthew Wale as its new prime minister c ...
May 16, 2026

Ending Chinese Visa-Free Travel May Hurt…

A growing push in Washington to restrict Chinese travel to the Northern Mariana Islands could kneeca ...
May 14, 2026

Perspective: Be Wary of China Twisting…

During U.S. President Donald Trump’s visit to China, pay special attention to China’s track reco ...
May 13, 2026

Other Article

Bizzare News

Indian Man Set World Record by…

Sunil Joseph, a 57-year-old Indian man with a lifelong love of collecting, set a Guinness World Reco ...
May 28, 2026
Pet Corner

Arabian Mau Cat

Originating in the United Arab Emirates, the Arabian Mau cat breed is intelligent, adaptable, and ev ...
Prevent Cyber Crime

Eavesdropping Attack

A malicious attempt to intercept and access data sent over a network without authorization is known ...
Bizzare News

Thai Skydiver Set Record for Highest…

Tanaboworn Sirikunakornkun from Thailand, also known as "Super Toom," claimed a record for the highe ...
May 27, 2026
Pet Corner

Turkish Pointer Dog Breed

The Turkish Pointer, or Tarsus Çatalburun, originated in Mersin, in Turkey's southern Tarsus region ...
Prevent Cyber Crime

Rainbow Table Attack

A rainbow table attack is an method for cracking passwords that makes use of a unique table to crack ...

Top