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Method for production of high protein feed from edible fungus chaff

A technology of high-protein feed and edible fungi, which is applied in the field of producing high-protein feed by using edible fungus chaff, can solve problems such as air pollution, pollution, and reproduction of pathogenic bacteria, and achieve the goals of reducing production costs, waste utilization environment, and good application prospects Effect

Inactive Publication Date: 2015-12-16
JIANGNAN UNIV
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  • Summary
  • Abstract
  • Description
  • Claims
  • Application Information

AI Technical Summary

Problems solved by technology

However, since edible fungus chaff is grown from a variety of cellulose and lignin-rich sources such as chaff, straw, wood chips, etc., although fungus chaff contains a large amount of fungal chaff protein, it cannot be directly added to animal diets as feed. Because the crude fiber of the original edible mushroom residue is very high, which is higher than the standard of digestion and absorption of ordinary animals, and the smell and palatability cannot meet the feeding conditions, and it cannot be stored for a long time
Therefore, at present, edible fungus residues are used to be dried and then incinerated or landfilled. The drying process may cause the reproduction of pathogenic bacteria, and incineration will also cause air pollution.
Not only did not give full play to the economic value of the fungus chaff, but it also brought pollution

Method used

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Examples

Experimental program
Comparison scheme
Effect test

Embodiment 1

[0026] Take 10kg of Pleurotus eryngii mushroom sticks, crush them to obtain the chaff, add 15L of enzyme-producing induction solution, and incubate at 23°C for 3 days, soak the obtained system in 40L of distilled water, shake, and filter to obtain the crude enzyme solution and the residue of the chaff. Continue to add 500g of Tenebrio molitor larvae to the residual fungus chaff, and cultivate to each instar larvae at 30° C., relative humidity 75%, and light intensity 400 lx. After sieving, dry it for later use to obtain high-protein feed.

Embodiment 2

[0028] Take 10 kg of Pleurotus ostreatus mushroom sticks, crush them to obtain the chaff, add 20 L of enzyme-producing inducing solution, and incubate at 25°C for 6 days, soak the obtained system in 50 L of distilled water, shake, and filter to obtain the crude enzyme solution and the residue of the chaff. Continue to add 800 g of earthworm larvae to the remaining fungus chaff, and cultivate them at 23° C., relative humidity of 85%, and light intensity of 200 lx. After sieving, dry it for later use to obtain high-protein feed.

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Abstract

The invention discloses a method for production of high protein feed from edible fungus chaff. The method specifically includes: breaking a fungus stick to obtain fungus chaff, adding an enzyme production induction liquid, then conducting culture under suitable conditions, eluting the fermentation system to obtain ligninase and efficiently transformed fungus chaff, then adding Tenebrio molitor, fly larvae, earthworms, locusts, silkworm chrysalis and other insect larvae into the remaining material to conduct culture, thus obtaining a high protein feed culture system. Compared with other production processes producing feed from biomass, the method can acquire ligninase, and realizes absorption and utilization of fungus chaff residue by the insect larvae so as to obtain the high protein feed. And pollution generated in the edible fungus production process is reduced.

Description

technical field [0001] A method for producing high-protein feed by using edible fungus chaff, in particular to a method for producing high-protein feed by using edible fungus chaff. It belongs to the technical field of bioengineering. Background technique [0002] Edible fungus bran refers to the complex of edible fungi and biomass raw materials after or before mushroom production in the production process of edible fungi. It is rich in bacterial protein, so it is called fungus bran protein. According to measurements, the protein content in the fungus chaff reaches 12% to 21%. However, since edible fungus chaff is grown from a variety of cellulose and lignin-rich sources such as chaff, straw, wood chips, etc., although fungus chaff contains a large amount of fungal chaff protein, it cannot be directly added to animal diets as feed. Because the crude fiber of the original edible mushroom residue is very high, which is higher than the standard of digestion and absorption of ...

Claims

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Application Information

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IPC IPC(8): A23K1/00A23K1/06A23K1/10A23K1/14A23K10/38
CPCY02P60/87
Inventor 廖祥儒张永蔡宇杰管政兵
Owner JIANGNAN UNIV
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