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The Truffle Hunter

The Truffle Hunter

 

Go Deeper

The Nature Conservancy in Oregon
In Oregon, The Nature Conservancy owns or manages 46 nature preserves and has helped protect over 494,000 acres of important habitat.

Jonathan Frank, a biologist at Southern Oregon University, has spent a lot of time in the past five years wandering through the state’s forests searching for truffles. “I wish we had a pig, or a good dog, but it’s mostly me out there on my hands and knees,” he says. “We’ll be very happy if we come back with five or six truffles in one day. It’s mostly fruitless searching.”

But Frank hit pay dirt recently while scratching his way around The Nature Conservancy’s Whetstone Savanna Preserve in Oregon, digging up what turned out to be three new species of truffles. In honor of the discovery, he named one after the preserve: Tuber whetstonense

Frank isn’t too worried about a rush of truffle hunters racing to dig up his new finds. “I brought them into the lab, served them with olive oil and French bread,” he says. “And they were unanimously considered to be remarkably bland.”

—Curtis Runyan

Nature picture credits: Photo © Jonathan Frank (Truffles)