Swiss researchers have built a battery from mushrooms that could power sensors used in agriculture and environmental research. The living battery does not produce much electricity but it could power sensors in remote regions, for example, as the Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology (Empa) announced on Thursday. Such sensors are used in agriculture and environmental research. +Get the most important news from Switzerland in your inbox Strictly speaking, the mushroom battery is a microbial fuel cell. It uses the metabolism of two different types of fungi to generate electricity. At the anode, the negative pole of the cell, a yeast fungus is fed with sugar. As it processes these nutrients, it releases electrons. On the other side of the cell, a white rot fungus produces an enzyme that captures the electrons and conducts them out of the cell. The battery is produced using a 3D printer. The mushroom cells are mixed into the printing ink. If the battery is dry ...