Abstract

The Qingyuan mushroom culture system (QMCS) in Zhejiang Province has been recognized as the source of the world’s first artificial cultivation of mushrooms with a history of more than 800 years. The system embodies the farming wisdom of the local people who have adapted themselves to and utilized nature and has integrated the traditional bark hacking method with multiple modern patterns for mushroom cultivation based on artificial microbial strains. We have investigated the input–output operation of farmers and assessed and analyzed emergy indicators in a bid to reflect and compare their economic and ecological benefits, as well as their sustainable development by analyzing the three typical mushroom cultivation patterns. The cost-benefit analysis of the three patterns shows that the sawdust medium-cultivated method (SMCM) is characterized by dominance in both net income without labor cost and labor productivity; while the evaluation based on emergy indicators has proven that each has its own advantages and disadvantages in terms of ecological and economic benefits and sustainable development. Among them, the bark hacking method (BHM) features the highest utilization rates of local and renewable resources, the smallest damage to the environment, the lowest production efficiency, and the highest exchange efficiency, but the sawdust medium-cultivated method is just the opposite, and the log-cultivated method (LCM) is the most favorable one for sustainable development. As its agricultural heritage, the QMCS’ core of dynamic protection and adaptive management lies in enhancing the sustainable development of its agricultural production methods. It is recommended that the three patterns be improved by targeting their respective shortcomings and at the same time, integrate their advantages to explore a new sustainable development pattern for mushroom cultivation.

Highlights

  • Fungi is of the most diverse organisms on earth and plays an important ecological and socio-economic role

  • In 2014, Qingyuan succeeded in applying for the second batch of Nationally Important Agricultural Heritage systems of China (China-NIAHS) with its Qingyuan mushroom culture system (QMCS) in Zhejiang [4,5], marking the first of China-NIAHS based on edible fungi

  • As for output, both the bark hacking method (BHM) and log-cultivated method (LCM) will produce mushrooms, and the fungus materials will return to the natural environment after being fully utilized; but, in addition to mushrooms, the waste bags in the sawdust medium-cultivated method (SMCM) can be recycled, so their market value should be included in the total revenue

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Summary

Introduction

Fungi is of the most diverse organisms on earth and plays an important ecological and socio-economic role. In 2014, Qingyuan succeeded in applying for the second batch of Nationally Important Agricultural Heritage systems of China (China-NIAHS) with its Qingyuan mushroom culture system (QMCS) in Zhejiang [4,5], marking the first of China-NIAHS based on edible fungi. It is proactively applying for the Globally Important Agricultural Heritage Systems (GIAHS) [6,7]

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