Farming of Medicinal Mushrooms

Adv Biochem Eng Biotechnol. 2023:184:29-76. doi: 10.1007/10_2021_201.

Abstract

Since most of the medicinal mushrooms are rare in nature, production of fungal fruiting bodies is hardly covering the food market and the production of pharmaceutically active products, so artificial cultivation of fruiting bodies in a form of farming has been intensively established during the last 40 years. Various cultivation technologies are presented, including traditional farming of fruiting bodies on wood logs and beds, and also on other substrate-based media, such as cultivation in bags, bottles, and others. The advantage of farming is a cheap but time-consuming large-scale production. Agriculture, wood, and food industry wastes represent the main substrates that are in this process delignified and enriched in proteins and highly valuable pharmaceutically active compounds. The present article presents an overview of achievements in artificial cultivation of fruiting bodies, including the most relevant medicinal mushroom species, such as Ganoderma lucidum, Grifola frondosa, Pleurotus ostreatus, Agaricus brasiliensis, and Lentinula edodes.

Keywords: Agaricus brasiliensis; Cultivation; Farming; Ganoderma lucidum; Grifola frondosa; Lentinula edodes; Medicinal mushrooms; Pleurotus ostreatus.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Agriculture
  • Fruiting Bodies, Fungal* / chemistry
  • Fruiting Bodies, Fungal* / metabolism
  • Industrial Waste / analysis
  • Pleurotus* / chemistry
  • Pleurotus* / metabolism
  • Wood

Substances

  • Industrial Waste