Bamboo waste recycling using Dictyophora indusiata mycelia cultivation
Purpose Reusing agricultural waste as a substrate material for mushroom cultivation was considered a great alternative to bio-waste disposal. In this study, bamboo waste from a local skewer factory in Lampang Province, Thailand, was used as a substrate, along with the original material for the mycel...
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OICC Press
2023-12-01
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Series: | International Journal of Recycling of Organic Waste in Agriculture |
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Online Access: | https://ijrowa.isfahan.iau.ir/article_695626_193df236e8f47b2039dc956532036585.pdf |
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author | Haruthai Thaisuchat Weeranuch Karuehanon Pornanan Boonkorn Jumnian Meesumlee Sarayut Malai Kanjana Ruttanateerawichien |
author_facet | Haruthai Thaisuchat Weeranuch Karuehanon Pornanan Boonkorn Jumnian Meesumlee Sarayut Malai Kanjana Ruttanateerawichien |
author_sort | Haruthai Thaisuchat |
collection | DOAJ |
description | Purpose Reusing agricultural waste as a substrate material for mushroom cultivation was considered a great alternative to bio-waste disposal. In this study, bamboo waste from a local skewer factory in Lampang Province, Thailand, was used as a substrate, along with the original material for the mycelial growth of Dictyophora indusiata mushroom.Method D. indusiata mycelia were grown in two materials in three different combinations: lingzhi pieces, lingzhi pieces combined with bamboo scraps (1:1), and bamboo scraps. A number of days when the substrate was completely covered with mycelia was recorded. After that, the mycelia from all three cultures were used as inoculum for cultivating D. indusiata through two procedures, including in-field direct cultivation and spawn production before cultivation. To evaluate the mushrooms productivity, the length of time to fruiting and the weight of the harvested mushrooms were recorded.Results D. indusiata mycelia grew fastest in a lingzhi-based substrate (19.3 days), followed by a combination of lingzhi and bamboo (24.9 days) and bamboo (35.7 days). The highest number of the fruiting body (37.0 mushrooms per plot) and fresh weight (2,310.5 g/0.75 m2) were observed in treatments in which spawn was produced prior to cultivation and inoculum was derived from lingzhi pieces combined with bamboo scraps. The next two highest mushroom yields were obtained through cultivation using bamboo scraps inoculum, which required more time to develop.Conclusion Bamboo scrap was a promising material for mycelial growth and cultivation of D. indusiata. |
format | Article |
id | doaj-art-0c721e79cf2148e6a92db0b2de22937b |
institution | Kabale University |
issn | 2195-3228 2251-7715 |
language | English |
publishDate | 2023-12-01 |
publisher | OICC Press |
record_format | Article |
series | International Journal of Recycling of Organic Waste in Agriculture |
spelling | doaj-art-0c721e79cf2148e6a92db0b2de22937b2025-02-03T09:52:04ZengOICC PressInternational Journal of Recycling of Organic Waste in Agriculture2195-32282251-77152023-12-0112453954810.30486/ijrowa.2022.1955758.1443695626Bamboo waste recycling using Dictyophora indusiata mycelia cultivationHaruthai Thaisuchat0Weeranuch Karuehanon1Pornanan Boonkorn2Jumnian Meesumlee3Sarayut Malai4Kanjana Ruttanateerawichien5Faculty of Science, Lampang Rajabhat University, ThailandFaculty of Science, Lampang Rajabhat University, ThailandFaculty of Science, Lampang Rajabhat University, ThailandFaculty of Agricultural Technology, Lampang Rajabhat University, ThailandFaculty of Industrial Technology, Lampang Rajabhat University, ThailandFaculty of Management Sciences, Lampang Rajabhat University, ThailandPurpose Reusing agricultural waste as a substrate material for mushroom cultivation was considered a great alternative to bio-waste disposal. In this study, bamboo waste from a local skewer factory in Lampang Province, Thailand, was used as a substrate, along with the original material for the mycelial growth of Dictyophora indusiata mushroom.Method D. indusiata mycelia were grown in two materials in three different combinations: lingzhi pieces, lingzhi pieces combined with bamboo scraps (1:1), and bamboo scraps. A number of days when the substrate was completely covered with mycelia was recorded. After that, the mycelia from all three cultures were used as inoculum for cultivating D. indusiata through two procedures, including in-field direct cultivation and spawn production before cultivation. To evaluate the mushrooms productivity, the length of time to fruiting and the weight of the harvested mushrooms were recorded.Results D. indusiata mycelia grew fastest in a lingzhi-based substrate (19.3 days), followed by a combination of lingzhi and bamboo (24.9 days) and bamboo (35.7 days). The highest number of the fruiting body (37.0 mushrooms per plot) and fresh weight (2,310.5 g/0.75 m2) were observed in treatments in which spawn was produced prior to cultivation and inoculum was derived from lingzhi pieces combined with bamboo scraps. The next two highest mushroom yields were obtained through cultivation using bamboo scraps inoculum, which required more time to develop.Conclusion Bamboo scrap was a promising material for mycelial growth and cultivation of D. indusiata.https://ijrowa.isfahan.iau.ir/article_695626_193df236e8f47b2039dc956532036585.pdfagro-industrial wasteedible fungimycelia growthdictyophora indusiataproduction |
spellingShingle | Haruthai Thaisuchat Weeranuch Karuehanon Pornanan Boonkorn Jumnian Meesumlee Sarayut Malai Kanjana Ruttanateerawichien Bamboo waste recycling using Dictyophora indusiata mycelia cultivation International Journal of Recycling of Organic Waste in Agriculture agro-industrial waste edible fungi mycelia growth dictyophora indusiataproduction |
title | Bamboo waste recycling using Dictyophora indusiata mycelia cultivation |
title_full | Bamboo waste recycling using Dictyophora indusiata mycelia cultivation |
title_fullStr | Bamboo waste recycling using Dictyophora indusiata mycelia cultivation |
title_full_unstemmed | Bamboo waste recycling using Dictyophora indusiata mycelia cultivation |
title_short | Bamboo waste recycling using Dictyophora indusiata mycelia cultivation |
title_sort | bamboo waste recycling using dictyophora indusiata mycelia cultivation |
topic | agro-industrial waste edible fungi mycelia growth dictyophora indusiataproduction |
url | https://ijrowa.isfahan.iau.ir/article_695626_193df236e8f47b2039dc956532036585.pdf |
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