Production and nutritional value of Pleurotus floridanus grown on rice straw supplemented with Leucaena leucocephala foliage

Edible mushrooms are increasingly recognized to offer health, environmental and socio-economical benefits across the globe. However, long cultivation time and low nutritional value of harvested mushrooms have remained the limiting factors for taping the benefits and sustainable production in develop...

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Main Author: Samora Macrice Andrew
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2023-02-01
Series:Environmental and Sustainability Indicators
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2665972722000551
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author Samora Macrice Andrew
author_facet Samora Macrice Andrew
author_sort Samora Macrice Andrew
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description Edible mushrooms are increasingly recognized to offer health, environmental and socio-economical benefits across the globe. However, long cultivation time and low nutritional value of harvested mushrooms have remained the limiting factors for taping the benefits and sustainable production in developing counties. There is therefore a need to seek for alternative substrate formulations that would shorten cultivation time, increase the nutritional value of mushrooms as well as ensure environmental sustainability. This study examined the potential of using nutrient and biomass rich Leucaena leucocephala (Lam.) de Wit foliage in combination with the rice straw (traditional substrate) to bolster production and nutritional value of Pleurotus floridanus mushroom in Morogoro, Tanzania. Mushrooms were grown in 30 × 40 cm 1.6 kg dry weight polythene bags in a randomized complete block design experiment with five treatments. The shortest cultivation period (average of 21 days) which stemmed largely from spawning to full mycelia colonization was attained when 5% Leucaena foliage was mixed with the rice straw. There was a significant (p < 0.05) increase in protein content from 23.3 to a maximum of 29.8%, when rice straw was supplemented with the 5% Leucaena, while further increase in Leucaena supplementation caused a lowering of crude protein content.There were significant increases (P < 0.05) in the contents of copper and calcium minerals when 5% of Leucaena foliage was incorporated into the growing substrate. Thus, to increase production cycle and contents of protein and essential minerals, addition of 5% of L. leucocephala foliage is recommended during production of P. floridanus using rice straw, for sustainability.
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spelling doaj.art-a909c880184d4a9a8b2a41715a085dba2023-02-03T05:01:10ZengElsevierEnvironmental and Sustainability Indicators2665-97272023-02-0117100223Production and nutritional value of Pleurotus floridanus grown on rice straw supplemented with Leucaena leucocephala foliageSamora Macrice Andrew0Department of Botany, College of Natural and Applied Sciences, University of Dar es Salaam, P.O. Box 35060, Dar es Salaam, TanzaniaEdible mushrooms are increasingly recognized to offer health, environmental and socio-economical benefits across the globe. However, long cultivation time and low nutritional value of harvested mushrooms have remained the limiting factors for taping the benefits and sustainable production in developing counties. There is therefore a need to seek for alternative substrate formulations that would shorten cultivation time, increase the nutritional value of mushrooms as well as ensure environmental sustainability. This study examined the potential of using nutrient and biomass rich Leucaena leucocephala (Lam.) de Wit foliage in combination with the rice straw (traditional substrate) to bolster production and nutritional value of Pleurotus floridanus mushroom in Morogoro, Tanzania. Mushrooms were grown in 30 × 40 cm 1.6 kg dry weight polythene bags in a randomized complete block design experiment with five treatments. The shortest cultivation period (average of 21 days) which stemmed largely from spawning to full mycelia colonization was attained when 5% Leucaena foliage was mixed with the rice straw. There was a significant (p < 0.05) increase in protein content from 23.3 to a maximum of 29.8%, when rice straw was supplemented with the 5% Leucaena, while further increase in Leucaena supplementation caused a lowering of crude protein content.There were significant increases (P < 0.05) in the contents of copper and calcium minerals when 5% of Leucaena foliage was incorporated into the growing substrate. Thus, to increase production cycle and contents of protein and essential minerals, addition of 5% of L. leucocephala foliage is recommended during production of P. floridanus using rice straw, for sustainability.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2665972722000551CultivationEdible mushroomsProteinEssential mineralsFood and income securityEnvironment
spellingShingle Samora Macrice Andrew
Production and nutritional value of Pleurotus floridanus grown on rice straw supplemented with Leucaena leucocephala foliage
Environmental and Sustainability Indicators
Cultivation
Edible mushrooms
Protein
Essential minerals
Food and income security
Environment
title Production and nutritional value of Pleurotus floridanus grown on rice straw supplemented with Leucaena leucocephala foliage
title_full Production and nutritional value of Pleurotus floridanus grown on rice straw supplemented with Leucaena leucocephala foliage
title_fullStr Production and nutritional value of Pleurotus floridanus grown on rice straw supplemented with Leucaena leucocephala foliage
title_full_unstemmed Production and nutritional value of Pleurotus floridanus grown on rice straw supplemented with Leucaena leucocephala foliage
title_short Production and nutritional value of Pleurotus floridanus grown on rice straw supplemented with Leucaena leucocephala foliage
title_sort production and nutritional value of pleurotus floridanus grown on rice straw supplemented with leucaena leucocephala foliage
topic Cultivation
Edible mushrooms
Protein
Essential minerals
Food and income security
Environment
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2665972722000551
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