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Ecology

Diversity and dynamics of the DNA- and cDNA-derived compost fungal communities throughout the commercial cultivation process for Agaricus bisporus

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Pages 475-484 | Received 07 Nov 2016, Accepted 17 Jun 2017, Published online: 31 Jul 2017
 

ABSTRACT

Commercial cultivation of the button mushroom Agaricus bisporus is performed through the inoculation of a semipasteurized composted material. Pasteurization of the compost material prior to inoculation results in a substrate with a fungal community that becomes dominated by A. bisporus. However, little is known about the composition and activity in the wider fungal community beyond the presence of A. bisporus in compost throughout the mushroom cropping process. In this study, the fungal cropping compost community was characterized by sequencing nuc rDNA ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 amplified from extractable DNA and RNA. The fungal community generated from DNA extracts identified a diverse community containing 211 unique species, although only 51 were identified from cDNA. Agaricus bisporus was found to dominate in the DNA-derived fungal community for the duration of the cropping process. However, analysis of cDNA extracts found A. bisporus to dominate only up to the first crop flush, after which activity decreased sharply and a much broader fungal community became active. This study has highlighted the diverse fungal community that is present in mushroom compost during cropping.

FUNDING

Funding for this project was jointly provided by both Enterprise Ireland under project no. 157004/RR and Monaghan Mushrooms Ltd. The authors of this article declare that there were no conflicts of interest in undertaking this study.

Supplemental data

Supplemental data for this article can be accessed on the publisher’s Web site.

Additional information

Funding

Funding for this project was jointly provided by both Enterprise Ireland under project no. 157004/RR and Monaghan Mushrooms Ltd. The authors of this article declare that there were no conflicts of interest in undertaking this study.

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