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1.
Thirteen species of saprobic rhabditid nematodes (11 genera) were identified from samples of compost and casing material collected from mushroom farms in the British Isles. Caenorhabditis elegans, the most frequently found saprobe, was mass-produced monoxenically and its effects on the cultivated mushroom, Agaricus bisporus (strain U3) were studied. C. elegans did not multiply in well-prepared, pasteurised, spawned compost, whereas casing material proved to be a highly suitable environment for its reproduction. An initial casing inoculum of 106 nematodes/crate of compost (7.5 kg), caused a significant reduction in mushroom yield. Losses in total mushroom yields of 11%, 20% and 26% were caused by initial inoculum rates of 106, 107and 2 × 107 nematodes/crate, respectively. Yields were negatively correlated with the initial nematode inoculation level and regression equations were derived. The nematode treatments caused fewer mushrooms to be produced and an absence of the usual distinctive flushing patterns. C. elegans caused considerable deterioration in mushroom quality and characteristic distortion of mushrooms. Individual sporophores were mis-shapen, notched and had brown or violet coloured grills. Up to 3.8%, 6.7% and 10.8% of total weight and 3.5%, 5.4% and 8% of total numbers of mushrooms were distorted at the three highest nematode inoculum rates tested. Weights and numbers of distorted mushrooms were positively correlated with the initial nematode population. C. elegans commonly colonised sporophores.  相似文献   

2.
The development of sciarids was reduced in old casing and in casing to which a commercial composting additive was added in large amounts. In laboratory tests, adding water, soya bean, cotton seed or oatmeal to finished mushroom composts reduced the mean development time of the larvae of Lycoriella auripila. Soya bean meal significantly increased the number of adult sciarids which matured. While the presence of mushroom mycelium in large quantities inhibited the development of sciarids, smaller amounts increased either the number of larvae maturing or their rate of development in different tests. Larvae were seen to feed on mycelium. The addition of sucrose solution either reduced or prolonged development time in different tests. Nitrogenous additives encouraged the growth of ‘weed moulds’. Both these and the number of sciarids which developed were reduced by adding a solution of calcium nitrate. The results suggested that more selective composts, favouring rapid mycelial colonization, would provide ‘cultural’ control of mushroom sciarids.  相似文献   

3.
Isolates from eight species of Agaricus were investigated in laboratory experiments for their effect on the development of the mushroom sciarid fly, Lycoriella ingenua (Dufour) (Diptera: Sciaridae), which is an important pest of the white mushroom Agaricus bisporus (Lange) Imbach (Agaricaceae). The population levels of L. ingenua developing in compost inoculated with Agaricus mycelium varied with the Agaricus isolate used, with some isolates causing high levels of inhibition. The development of L. ingenua populations and the survival of larval instars were inversely proportional to the amount of Agaricus inoculum applied. There was also a negative relationship between L. ingenua survival and the extension rate of the Agaricus isolate in compost. The results suggest that inhibition of L. ingenua population development by Agaricus is linked to the rate at which compost is colonized by fungal mycelium. Therefore, on mushroom farms, sciarid fly control should focus on protection of the compost before it has become colonized by mycelium, as this is when it is most vulnerable to the pest.  相似文献   

4.
Pasteurized, spawned, full-grown and immediately-cased full-grown compost were simultaneously exposed to natural populations of the mushroom pests Lycoriella auripila (Winnertz) (Diptera: Sciaridae) and Megaselia halterata (Wood) (Diptera: Phoridae). Different numbers of adults emerged from each of these composts. Highest numbers of L. auripila emerged from spawned and pasteurized compost whereas lowest numbers of L. auripila emerged from full-grown compost. the emergence from full-grown compost was delayed, which could be explained by the delayed development of the larvae in this type of compost. High numbers of M. halterata emerged from compost that was completely colonized by the mycelia of the edible white button mushroom Agaricus bisporus (Lange) Imbach. The immediate covering of the compost with a casing layer significantly lowered the numbers of emerging M. halterata flies. Compared with the emergence pattern from full-grown and immediately-cased full-grown compost, adult M. halterata showed a delayed pattern of emergence in spawned compost. Adult M. halterata did not emerge from pasteurized compost. The results of these experiments enabled us to improve the timing of the application of insect pathogenic nematodes in the control of the larvae of both insect pests.  相似文献   

5.
Incorporation of dried leaves of Azadirachta indica, Cannabis sativa, Eucalyptus tereticornis and Ricinus communis at 3 kg per 100 kg of dry wheat straw prior to composting had several effects. When compared with controls, treated composts exhibited a higher temperature during composting, a higher nitrogen content and a neutral pH. The treatments resulted in enhanced populations of thermophilic fungi and mesophilic antibiotic-producing fungi, but reduced numbers of mesophilic competitor/pathogenic moulds. Populations of the mycophagous nematode, Aphelenchoides composticola were reduced below economic injury level in dried leaf treated composts. Compost obtained from C. sativa and R. communis treatments were more rapidly colonised by the mushroom mycelium (Agaricus bisporus) than that from any other treatment. When compared with compost treated with carbofuran R. communis, C. sativa and A. indica treatments significantly increased mushroom yield by 19.4, 8.1 and 6.5% and by 108.5, 88.7 and 85.9% when compared with the control. Yield from the E. tereticornis treatment was also higher than the control but lower than that of the nematicide treatment.  相似文献   

6.
Brian Crook  John Lacey 《Grana》2013,52(2):446-449
Exposure to microorganisms, including thermophilic actinomycetes and fungal spores, and to airborne dust produced during compost production and mushroom picking may cause work-related respiratory symptoms. Previous studies have implicated Thermoactinomyces vulgaris and Faenia rectivirgula, the aetiological agents in farmer's lung disease, as causes of these symptoms but these species have been rare in aerobiological studies of mushroom farms. As part of a study of the respiratory health of the exposed workers, we carried out an aerobiological survey of all the stages of commercial mushroom production. Samples of viable airborne microorganisms were collected at a farm from eight locations on two occasions using Andersen cascade impactors. Large numbers of airborne thermophilic actinomycetes, yielding > 106 colony-forming units (cfu) m?3 air sampled, were associated with compost handling. These were predominantly Thermomonospora spp., while Thermoactinomyces spp. and Faenia rectivirgula were few. Because the compost was largely undisturbed, few airborne actinomycete spores were found in mushroom growing houses, but concentrations of fungal spores exceeded 105 cfu m?3 when mushrooms were being harvested. Most were Penicillium spp. and Aspergillus fumigatus but Peziza ostracoderma and Trichoderma spp. were also isolated. Workers are thus exposed to a wide range of airborne microorganisms, but the role of many of these in mushroom workers' respiratory symptoms is not yet fully understood.  相似文献   

7.
A static‐air olfactometer was used to investigate the behavioural responses of adult female phorid [Megaselia halterata (Wood) (Diptera: Phoridae)] and sciarid [Lycoriella castanescens (Lengersdorf) (Diptera: Sciaridae)] flies to the commercial white mushroom, Agaricus bisporus (Lange) Imbach, grown on a standard pasteurised composted substrate. The attraction of the flies was measured in relation to four test materials: composted substrate spawned with A. bisporus mycelium for 4 days and 14 days, uncolonised composted substrate, and A. bisporus sporophores. The experiment was done according to a 4 × 4 × 4 Latin cube design, and the results were analysed using a generalised linear model. It was found that both the occasion on which a bioassay was run and the position of the olfactometer within a 4 × 4 array could affect the proportion of the fly population responding to a test material. Megalesia halterata preferred spawned compost to unspawned compost, and the level of response to compost spawned for 14 days was greater than to compost spawned for 4 days. In contrast, L. castanescens were attracted equally to all of the materials tested. Overall, L. castanescens showed a greater level of activity than M. halterata, and was more likely to enter the pitfall traps in the olfactometer. For both M. halterata and L. castanescens, the type of test material affected the numbers of adult flies of the F1 generation that emerged from it following oviposition. The highest numbers of emerging M. halterata were obtained from a composted substrate spawned for 4 days, and none emerged from the unspawned compost. Emergence of L. castanescens was highest from the uncolonised composted substrate, and there was a negative relationship between emergence and the amount of mycelium in the composted substrate. The results are consistent with the use of volatiles in the detection of oviposition sites by both species; however, further studies of the materials will be necessary to determine precisely which oviposition cues the insects use.  相似文献   

8.
Actinobacteria are widely distributed in many environments and represent the most important trigger to the occupant respiratory health. Health complaints, including hypersensitivity pneumonitis of the workers, were recorded in a mushroom compost facility (MCF). The studies on the airborne bacteria were carried out to find a possible microbiological source of these symptoms. Culture analysis of compost bioaerosols collected in different location of the MCF was performed. An assessment of the indoor microbial exposure revealed bacterial flora of bioaerosol in the mushroom compost facility represented by Bacillus, Geobacillus, Micrococcus, Pseudomonas, Staphylococcus spp., and actinobacterial strain with white aerial mycelium. The thermotolerant actinobacterial strain of the same morphology was repeatedly isolated from many locations in MCF: air, compost sample, and solid surface in production hall. On the base of complex morphological, chemotaxonomic, and phylogenetic characteristics, the isolate has been classified as Nocardiopsis alba. Dominant position of N. alba in microbial environment of the mushroom compost facility may represent an indicator microorganism in compost bioaerosol. The bioavailability of N. alba in mushroom compost facility creates potential risk for the health of workers, and the protection of respiratory tract and/or skin is strongly recommended.  相似文献   

9.
To evaluate the attractiveness of several mushroom‐growing substrates to the female mushroom fly Lycoriella ingenua (Dufour) (Diptera: Sciaridae), a pest of the cultivated white button mushroom, Agaricus bisporus (JE Lange) Emil J Imbach (Agaricales), we developed a two‐choice, static‐flow olfactometer. Behavioral assays using this olfactometer indicated that mushroom compost with A. bisporus mycelia growing in it was not more attractive than compost lacking growing mycelia. We also found that female flies were more attracted to compost lacking A. bisporus mycelia than to the actual commodity, the white button mushroom fruiting bodies. Flies were not, however, attracted to sterilized compost, suggesting the attraction is due to volatiles produced by microbial metabolism in the compost. We also found that female L. ingenua flies were attracted to the mycoparasitic green mold Trichoderma aggressivum Samuels & W Gams (Hypocreales). Flies preferred mushroom compost that had T. aggressivum growing in it over compost lacking T. aggressivum, providing an experimental outcome consistent with the anecdotal belief that L. ingenua flies are vectors of T. aggressivum spores that can infest mushroom‐growing houses.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract The survival of a plasmid-containing Bacillus subtilis released into mushroom compost was investigated. The indigenous Bacillus population of mushroom compost exhibited an antibiotic-resistance profile that was distinguished by almost complete absence of chloramphenicol resistance. Bacillus subtilis containing the chloramphenicol-resistance plasmid pC194 was released into mushroom compost microcosms and populations were monitored at different incubation temperatures. The organism colonized both sterile and untreated compost at 37°C, and to a lesser extent at 50°C, but was eliminated after 30 d at 65°C. Although sporulation of the B. subtilis population occurred within compost, the population was maintained for up to 13 weeks at 50°C, largely as vegetative cells. Experiments in which the B. subtilis host strain, without plasmid, was released demonstrated that plasmid carriage had no effect on the ability of the bacterium to colonize and survive in compost. Furthermore, the size and composition of the indigenous bacterial population was unaffected by the presence of the introduced B. subtilis strain. Virtually no loss of plasmid pC194 from the B. subtilis population in compost was observed, and experiments at low growth rates in chemostats confirmed the stability of this host/vector system in the absence of positive selection pressure. Received: 9 July 1997; Accepted: 20 October 1997  相似文献   

11.
Biology and life table parameters of Brennandania lambi (Krczal) were studied at different temperatures while feeding on white mushroom (Agaricus bisporus) mycelium cultured on mushroom compost. The duration of egg and larva development, preoviposition and oviposition period, female longevity, and the time to 50% mortality declined as temperature increased from 16 to 28°C. The threshold temperature of development (female) was 9°C and the thermal constant for completion of development (female) was 195 day-degrees. At 16, 20, 24 and 28°C, the total fecundity (eggs/female) was 71, 67, 66 and 57, respectively and the daily fecundity rate (eggs/female/day) was 5.6, 8.7, 8.7 and 9.1, respectively. The sex ratio (female/male) ranged from 1.9 to 2.1 at 16–28°C. At 16, 20, 24 and 28°C, the intrinsic rate of natural increase (r m) was 0.11, 0.18, 0.22 and 0.27, respectively, and the population doubling time was 6.1, 3.9, 3.2 and 2.5 days, respectively. All life stages of the mite died when exposed to 35°C constant temperature for 24h, or to 32°C constant temperature for 12 days or to 31–35°C (average 32.9°C) ambient temperature for 4 days. Brennandania lambi completed development only when fed on Ag. bisporus mycelium growing on mushroom compost. It could not survive on mushroom mycelia of Auricularia auricula, Au. polytricha, Ganoderma lucidum, Hericium erinaceus, Lentinus edodes, Pleurotus ostreatus, P. sajor-caju and Tremella fuciformis.  相似文献   

12.
The growth-promoting effect of the thermophilic fungus Scytalidium thermophilum in mushroom compost on the mycelium of the edible mushroom Agaricus bisporus was investigated. Results obtained by others were confirmed by showing that S. thermophilum leads to an increased hyphal extension rate of the mushroom mycelium. However, it was demonstrated that hyphal extension rates were not clearly related to mushroom biomass increase rates. A number of experiments pointed strongly towards CO2 as the determinant of hyphal extension rates. In compost, CO2 is produced mainly by thermophilic fungi. Several experiments did not reveal any other specific compound produced by S. thermophilum that increases the hyphal extension rate of the mushroom mycelium.  相似文献   

13.
The growth-promoting effect of the thermophilic fungus Scytalidium thermophilum in mushroom compost on the mycelium of the edible mushroom Agaricus bisporus was investigated. Results obtained by others were confirmed by showing that S. thermophilum leads to an increased hyphal extension rate of the mushroom mycelium. However, it was demonstrated that hyphal extension rates were not clearly related to mushroom biomass increase rates. A number of experiments pointed strongly towards CO2 as the determinant of hyphal extension rates. In compost, CO2 is produced mainly by thermophilic fungi. Several experiments did not reveal any other specific compound produced by S. thermophilum that increases the hyphal extension rate of the mushroom mycelium.  相似文献   

14.
Eight trials were carried out in 2011 and 2012 in Northern Italy to evaluate the efficacy of grafting, compost and biofumigation with Brassica carinata against Colletotrichum coccodes on tomato. Four trials were carried out in commercial farms, and four trials were carried out in plastic tunnels at an experimental centre. The rootstocks ‘Armstrong’, ‘Arnold’, ‘Beaufort’, ‘Big Power’, ‘Brigeor’, ‘Emperador’, ‘King Kong’, ‘Spirit’ and ‘Superpro V295’ were tested. Host plants included several tomato F1 hybrids: ‘Amantino’, ‘Arawak’, ‘CLX 37438’, ‘Cauralina’, ‘CU 8301’, ‘CU 8506’, ‘DRK 7021’, ‘E 34431’, ‘E 50070’, ‘EXP’, ‘Gotico’, ‘Ingrid’, ‘ISI 61401’, ‘ISI 61402’, ‘Profitto’, ‘Punente’, ‘Rugantino’ and ‘Tomahawk’. Tomato roots from the control plots were 34 to 87% diseased in both naturally and artificially infested soil. Among the nineteen commercial tomato hybrids tested, in the presence of a very high disease pressure in a naturally infested soil, ‘Rugantino’ was the least affected by C. coccodes, showing 32% infected roots. ‘Tomahawk’ grafted onto ‘Arnold’, ‘Armstrong’ and ‘Superpro V295’ was significantly less affected by C. coccodes, while ‘Arawak’ grafted onto ‘Armstrong’, ‘Arnold’, ‘Emperador’ and ‘Beaufort’ provided very good control of root rot in the different trials. Compost addition and biofumigation with Brassica pellets were also tested with and without grafting. Soil amendment with compost, in the case of the ‘Arawak’ and ‘Tomahawk’, resulted in a slightly improved disease control only on non‐grafted plants. When grafting and biofumigation were combined in a soil naturally infested with C. coccodes and Meloidogyne arenaria, biofumigation did not improve C. coccodes control in comparison with grafting alone. In a naturally infested soil, compost alone and combined with biofumigation improved disease control only on non‐grafted ‘Tomahawk’ plants. In general, grafting by itself provided very good results in terms of disease control, which were not significantly improved by combination with compost and/or biofumigation.  相似文献   

15.
The fungus Agaricus bisporus is commercially grown for the production of edible mushrooms. This cultivation occurs on compost, but not all of this substrate is consumed by the fungus. To determine why certain fractions remain unused, carbohydrate degrading enzymes, water-extracted from mushroom-grown compost at different stages of mycelium growth and fruiting body formation, were analyzed for their ability to degrade a range of polysaccharides. Mainly endo-xylanase, endo-glucanase, β-xylosidase and β-glucanase activities were determined in the compost extracts obtained during mushroom growth. Interestingly, arabinofuranosidase activity able to remove arabinosyl residues from doubly substituted xylose residues and α-glucuronidase activity were not detected in the compost enzyme extracts. This correlates with the observed accumulation of arabinosyl and glucuronic acid substituents on the xylan backbone in the compost towards the end of the cultivation. Hence, it was concluded that compost grown A. bisporus lacks the ability to degrade and consume highly substituted xylan fragments.  相似文献   

16.
An apparatus is described in which pure cultures of Agaricus bisporus were maintained on composted media in filtered atmospheres free from (a) noxious concentrations of carbon dioxide, and (b) contaminating microorganisms. When grown on compost alone, cultures of A. bisporus did not produce sporophores. Their formation was however stimulated by a covering layer of an unsterilized mixture of peat and chalk (=‘casing’ soil). Autoclaving or fumigating ‘casing’ with propylene oxide decreased populations of contaminating bacteria and prevented sporophore formation. Populations of micro-organisms isolated from unsterile ‘casing’ contained bacteria which when added to pure cultures of A. bisporus stimulated fruit-body formation. Numbers of these stimulators increased when cultured on a carbon-free liquid medium exposed to atmospheres with ethanol, ethyl acetate and acetone or containing the volatile metabolites of A. bisporus. The ability to utilize these volatile chemicals was exploited in a selective technique for isolating sporophore stimulators where aqueous suspensions of mixed bacterial populations were exposed to atmospheres of these materials for 5 days, before aliquots were added to agar media subsequently gelled. The stimulatory bacteria were identified as, or closely related to, Pseudomonas putida.  相似文献   

17.
A technique used for 3 yr to produce 15 000–20 000 nematode-free adult Megaselia halterata/v/k is described and its potential for future mass-production of nematode-parasitised flies, for use in biological control, is assessed. Gravid female phorids preferred to oviposit in compost in which mushroom mycelium had grown for 7–12 days. At 20 ± 1 °C flies began to emerge 24 days after adults of the previous generation had been released on the compost. By day28, 88% of the total population had emerged. In laboratory experiments using different densities of parental flies, fly yield per female was highest when 200 flies infested each 1 kg of compost. At higher densities, competition between larvae affected survival of larvae and pupae, and probably resulted in the mean egg content of emerging flies being reduced by as much as 16-4%. Theoretically, 250 kg compost should yield 1 150 000 phorids.  相似文献   

18.
Twelve isolates from the genus Agaricus (Fungi, Basidiomycota) were investigated for their ability to support development of the phorid fly, Megaselia halterata (Wood), which is an important pest of the commercial white button mushroom Agaricus bisporus. Combined effects of oviposition of adult female M. halterata and larval development in mushroom compost inoculated with Agaricus mycelium were determined using bioassays. The numbers of M. halterata offspring that developed were affected by the Agaricus isolate used, and there was a significant separation between resistant and susceptible isolates. In a bioassay where the female phorids had a choice of all 12 isolates for oviposition, three isolates produced >200 adults per 100 g compost pot while the remaining nine isolates had <20 adults per pot. Where there was no choice of Agaricus isolate for oviposition, five isolates resulted in >100 adults per 100 g compost pot while the remainder resulted in <4 adults per pot. With the susceptible isolates, there was a positive correlation between increasing concentration of mycelium in the substrate and phorid development until the concentration exceeded 40% after which numbers of emerging phorids declined. Genetic identity of Agaricus isolates was determined using ITS sequencing and phylogenetic methods, which revealed two major cluster groups. Isolates supporting the development of large populations of M. halterata were located in one of these clusters (group I), and were either Agaricus bisporus or other species from the same Agaricus section Duploannulatae. Isolates that did not support the development of M. halterata populations were located in a different cluster (group II) and were more genetically distant from A. bisporus, e.g. Agaricus sections Arvenses, Minores and Xanthodermatei. Species of Agaricus with resistance to M. halterata could have significant potential for the breeding and cultivation of phorid-free mushrooms.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Vermicomposting of sewage sludge (SS) using spent mushroom compost from Pleurotus sajor-caju as feed material was conducted to determine the effect on the concentration of heavy metals, namely Cr, Cd, Pb, Cu, and Zn. Previous studies have reported the feasibility of brandling worms, Eisenia foetida, for vermicomposting SS, whereas we conducted vermicomposting by employing red worms, Lumbricus rubellus, with a combination of different percentages of SS and spent mushroom compost (SMC) for 70 days subsequent to 21 days of precomposting. The vermicompost produced in treatments with a low percentage of SS were fine in texture, dark in colour and odourless in contrast to the initial physical characteristics. Results indicate that growth in earthworm numbers and biomass gain was maximum at 25: 75 (TD) of SS: SMC compared to other treatments with 5 and 8-fold increases, respectively. The heavy metals contained in vermicompost were 0.25 ∼ 11.57-fold higher than the initial concentration due to mineralization and excretion of non-accumulated heavy metals existent in the earthworms’ gut, which were present prior to treatments. Even so, the concentration was below the limits set by EU and US biosolid compost standards and safe to be utilized as a biofertilizer and soil conditioner.  相似文献   

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