Valorisation of spent mushroom substrate by secondary microbial fermentation
P. W. Baker, R. Bragança, A. J. Lloyd, A. Charlton

TL;DR
This paper reviews how spent mushroom substrate can be reused through secondary microbial fermentation for various applications like biofuels and fertilizers.
Contribution
The paper highlights SMS valorisation through secondary fermentation as a novel and emerging research area over the past 14 years.
Findings
Spent mushroom substrate (SMS) contains variable hemicellulose and lignin content based on white-rot fungi used.
Secondary fermentation of SMS has potential in biofuel production, enzyme generation, and microbial compound formation.
Larger-scale solid-state fermentation is suggested for SMS valorisation.
Abstract
Global mushroom production exceeds 45 million tonnes, involving growth on a lignocellulosic substrate. More than 70% of these mushrooms are considered wild mushrooms that are grown on a lignocellulose substrate. At the end of the growth cycle, the remaining spent mushroom substrate (SMS) is considered waste with little value and is often discarded. The limited information available on the fibre content remaining in SMS indicates that different white-rot fungi can result in significant differences in the hemicellulose and lignin content, which in turn may impact the second fermentation step. Secondary fermentation has found uses in the production of biofuels, as a preserved ruminant feed, for enzyme production, in the formation of microbial compounds, and as an amended fertiliser. Finally, achieving secondary fermentation of SMS could involve the development and use of larger-scale…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBiofuel production and bioconversion · Enzyme-mediated dye degradation · Enzyme Production and Characterization
