Research Keyword: microbial suppression

Searching for Chemical Agents Suppressing Substrate Microbiota in White-Rot Fungi Large-Scale Cultivation

This research addresses a practical challenge in growing edible mushrooms and using fungi to clean polluted materials: unwanted bacteria and molds prevent beneficial white-rot fungi from growing. Scientists tested various cheap chemicals to find which ones kill unwanted microbes while letting white-rot fungi thrive. They discovered that hydrogen peroxide at 1.5-3% concentration works best, effectively eliminating competing microorganisms without harming the desired fungi, making large-scale mushroom farming and pollution cleanup more feasible and economical.

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Arbuscular mycorrhiza suppresses microbial abundance, and particularly that of ammonia oxidizing bacteria, in agricultural soils

This study examined how a beneficial fungus called arbuscular mycorrhiza affects bacteria that break down ammonia in soil. Researchers tested 50 different agricultural soils and found that the fungus suppressed ammonia-oxidizing bacteria populations. Interestingly, the presence of the fungus actually increased ammonia levels in soil while decreasing nitrate, suggesting the relationship is more complex than simple competition for nutrients.

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