Abstract

Agaricus bisporus mushrooms are commercially produced on a microbe rich compost. Here, fungal and bacterial biomass was quantified in compost with and without colonization by A. bisporus. Chitin content, indicative of total fungal biomass, increased during a 26-day period from 576 to 779 nmol N-acetylglucosamine g−1 compost in the absence of A. bisporus (negative control). A similar increase was found in the presence of this mushroom forming fungus. The fungal phospholipid-derived fatty acid (PLFA) marker C18:2ω6, indicative of the living fraction of the fungal biomass, decreased from 575 to 280 nmol g−1 compost in the negative control. In contrast, it increased to 1200 nmol g−1 compost in the presence of A. bisporus. Laccase activity was absent throughout culturing in the negative control, while it correlated with the fungal PLFA marker in the presence of A. bisporus. PLFA was also used to quantify living bacterial biomass. In the negative control, the bacterial markers remained constant at 3000–3200 nmol PLFA g−1 compost. In contrast, they decreased to 850 nmol g−1 compost during vegetative growth of A. bisporus, implying that bacterial biomass decreased from 17.7 to 4.7 mg g−1 compost. The relative amount of the Gram positive associated PLFA markers a15:0 and a17:0 and the Gram negative PLFA associated markers cy17:0 and cy19:0 increased and decreased, respectively, suggesting that Gram negative bacteria are more suppressed by A. bisporus. Together, these data indicate that fungal biomass can make up 6.8% of the compost after A. bisporus colonization, 57% of which being dead. Moreover, results show that A. bisporus impacts biomass and composition of bacteria in compost.

Highlights

  • Compost is used for the commercial production of the fruiting bodies of Agaricus bisporus known as button mushrooms

  • Fungal biomass in compost Agaricus bisporus strain A15 was grown in phase II (PII)-end compost for 26 days

  • Fungal biomass was determined by laccase activity and by chitin and phospholipid-derived fatty acid (PLFA) content

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Summary

Introduction

Compost is used for the commercial production of the fruiting bodies of Agaricus bisporus known as button mushrooms. Phase I (PI) of composting takes 3–6 days during which temperature increases to 80 °C due to microbial activity. Introduction of A. bisporus spawn in PII-end compost initiates phase III (PIII). This phase takes 16–19 days, during which the button mushroom colonizes the compost at 25 °C. This is accompanied by degradation of 50% of the lignin, with an additional decomposition of 15% of the xylan and 10% of the cellulose (Jurak 2015; Jurak et al 2015). Casing is essential for mushroom formation (Visscher 1988), probably due to bacterial activity that removes

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