| Literature DB >> 34847161 |
Eugene Soh1, Nazanin Saeidi2,3, Alireza Javadian2,3, Dirk E Hebel2,3, Hortense Le Ferrand1,3,4.
Abstract
The transition from a linear to a circular economy is urgently needed to mitigate environmental impacts and loss of biodiversity. Among the many potential solutions, the development of entirely natural-based materials derived from waste is promising. One such material is mycelium-bound composites obtained from the growth of fungi onto solid lignocellulosic substrates, which find applications such as insulating foams, textiles, packaging, etc. During growth, the fungus degrades and digests the substrate to create a web-like stiff network called mycelium. The development of the mycelium is influenced by several factors, including the substrate composition. As food waste accounts for nearly 44% of total municipal solid waste, incorporating food in the substrate composition could be a means to increase the nutrients absorbed by the fungus. In this paper, we study the effects of the addition of food supplements on the growth of two fungal species, Ganoderma lucidum and Pleurotus ostreatus. The substrates, the food supplements, and the mycelia are characterized using Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy, scanning electron microscopy, and optical microscopy. Our results show that addition of barley as a supplement significantly boosts the growth of G. lucidum and P. ostreatus. Using a common food as a nutritious enrichment for the development of mycelium is a simple and straightforward strategy to create waste-based mycelium-bound biocomposites for a large range of applications, on-site, therefore promoting a circular economy.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34847161 PMCID: PMC8631619 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0260170
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Literature overview of the influence of substrates and supplements on the growth of G. lucidum and P. ostreatus.
| Fungus | Substrate | Supplements | Results | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oak sawdust | Rice bran, food waste compost | 15% food waste compost gave highest yield of fruiting bodies. Higher concentration reduced the yield. | [ | |
| Sawdust of hornbeam | Tea waste, wheat bran and CaCO3 | 20% of tea waste led to highest yield. Increased growth due to high amounts of K, N, Fe, Mg. | [ | |
| Wheat straw | Olive by-products | Increase in the protein content of | [ | |
| Cotton stalk, maize straw, rice straw, sugarcane bagasse, wheat straw | Wheat bran and corn gluten | Rice straw showed the highest yield with increase in protein and polysaccharide content. | [ | |
| Shredded cassava | Wheat bran, rice bran, MgSO4 | Wheat bran more favourable than rice bran. | [ | |
|
| Spent mushroom substrate | Wheat bran and soybean flour | Food supplement increased the laccase activity and the formation of fruiting bodies. | [ |
| Alder, beech and oak sawdust, flax shives | N.A. | Higher yield on alder and beech sawdust. | [ | |
| Sawdust from acacia | Soy residue from was tofu manufacturing. | Highest rate of mycelial growth for media ratios of C to N content on the growing substrate. | [ | |
|
| Leaves from hazelnut, tilia, European aspen, wheat straw, beech sawdust, waste paper | Wheat bran | Wheat straw led to higher growth. Wheat bran led to contamination. | [ |
| Wood chips, boll, sugar beet pellet pulp, palm fiber | Wheat bran, rice bran, soya cake powder, rice bran, carrot pulp | Highest yield for boll, beet pellet and palm fiber with supplements. | [ | |
| Diaper and food waste. | N.A. | Showed it could grow. | [ | |
| Acacia sawdust, corncob, sugarcane bagasse | N.A. | Highest growth on corncob and sugarcane bagasse. | [ | |
| Poplar sawdust. | Food waste compost, rice bran | Optimum growth rate for 12% rice bran and 25% food waste | [ | |
| Rice straw, wheat straw, paper, sugarcane bagasse, sawdust of alder | Rice bran | Rice straw alone was found to give the highest yield | [ | |
| Potato dextrose agar, yam dextrose agar, sweet potato dextrose agar, malt extract agar | Molasses, glucose | Potato and yam dextrose agar led to the highest yield. Largest colony growth with 1 to 5% sucrose supplement. | [ | |
| Wheat stalk, millet stalk, soybean stalk, cotton stalk | N.A. | Highest yield on soybean stalk. | [ | |
| Sawdust from | N.A. | Highest yield on sawdust. The yield was found to correlate with the high cellulose, lignin and fibre content of the substrate. | [ | |
| Alfalfa, barley hay, sawdust (not specified), wheat hay | Salts | Highest growth on wheat hay and distilled water. | [ | |
| Sawdust (not specified) | Cassava peel, yam peel, plantain leaf | Sawdust supplemented with 10% cassava peel led to the best results. | [ | |
| Wheat straw | Grape pomace | Some toxicity from the grape pomace. | [ | |
| Sawdust from beech, oak and poplar, wheat and rye straw, by-products from the textile industry, flax and hemp shives | N.A. | Wheat and rye straw with flax shives led to the highest yield. | [ | |
| Empty fruit bunch and sugarcane bagasse | N.A. | Empty fruit bunch can be used. | [ | |
| Wheat straw, cotton gin-trash, peanut shells, poplar, oak sawdust, corn cobs, olive press-cakes | N.A. | Highest growth on the cotton gin-trash, peanut shells and poplar sawdust. | [ | |
| Wheat straw | Olive mill waste and olive pruning residues | Small concentration in olive mill and pruning residues increased the protein content in both fungi. Generally, | [ | |
| Cellulose | Potato dextrose | Cellulose with potato dextrose led to higher growth presumably because simplest to digest. | [ | |
| Cocopeat with sawdust (not specified) | N.A. | 50% cocopeat led to the highest yield. | [ |
Composition used in the growth experiments with the three food supplements and the two fungus species.
|
| Lignocellulosic substrate | Amount of food supplement | Amount of inoculum | Amount of water |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 g bamboo | 0.5 g barley | 0.5 g | 3 g | |
| 1 g bamboo | 0.5 g oats | 0.5 g | 3 g | |
| 1 g bamboo | 0.5 g flaxseed | 0.5 g | 3 g | |
| 2 g bamboo | 2 g barley | 1 g | 3 g | |
| 2 g bamboo | 2 g oats | 1 g | 3 g | |
| 2 g bamboo | 2 g flaxseed | 1 g | 3 g |
Composition used in the growth experiments with barley, and the two lignocellulosic substrates bamboo, and wood chips, at different mycelium to water ratios.
|
| Lignocellulosic substrate | Amount of barley supplement | Amount of inoculum | Amount of water |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 g bamboo | 1 g | 0.5 g | 3 g | |
| 2 g bamboo | 1 g | 1.5 g | 3 g | |
| 2 g bamboo | 1 g | 2 g | 3 g | |
| 2 g bamboo | 1 g | 2 g | 6 g | |
| 2 g wood chips | 1 g | 0.5 g | 3 g | |
| 2 g wood chips | 1 g | 1.5 g | 3 g | |
| 2 g wood chips | 1 g | 2 g | 3 g | |
| 2 g wood chips | 1 g | 2 g | 6 g |