Description

Book Synopsis

During the 20th century, agriculture underwent many unsustainable changes for the sake of greater food production. Today, the effects of climate change are becoming ever more apparent and the global population continues to grow, placing additional pressures on agricultural systems. For this reason, it is vital to turn international agriculture towards a sustainable future capable of providing healthy, bountiful foods by using methods that preserve and reconstruct the balance of natural ecosystems.

Fungi are an underappreciated, underutilized group of organisms with massive potential to aid in the production of healthy food and other products while also increasing the sustainability of agricultural systems. Mycoagroecology: Integrating Fungi into Agroecosystems lays the foundations for integrated fungal-agricultural understanding and management, the proposed practice of âœmycoagroecologyâ. Suitable for students and professionals of multiple disciplines, this text includes nine introductory chapters that create a firm foundation in ecosystem functioning, evolution and population dynamics, fungal biology, principles of crop breeding and pest management, basic economics of agriculture, and the history of agricultural development during the 20th century. The latter half of the text is application-oriented, integrating the knowledge from the introductory chapters to help readers understand more deeply the various roles of fungi in natural and agricultural systems:

PARTNERS: This text explores known benefits of wild plant-fungal mutualisms, and how to foster and maintain these relationships in a productive agricultural setting.

PESTS AND PEST CONTROL AGENTS: This text acknowledges the historical and continuing role of agriculturally significant fungal pathogens, surveying modern chemical, biotechnological, and cultural methods of controlling them and other pests. However, this book also emphasizes the strong potential of beneficial fungi to biologically control fungal, insect, and other pests.

PRODUCTS: This text covers not just isolated production of mushrooms on specialized farms but also the potential for co-cropping mushrooms in existing plant-based farms, making farm systems more self-sustaining while adding valuable and nutritious new products. An extensive chapter is also devoted to the many historical and forward-facing uses of fungi in food preservation and processing.



Table of Contents

INTRODUCTION

1 Nutrient Cycling and Trophic Lifestyles (Elizabeth Gall and Noureddine Benkeblia)

1.1 Photosynthesis: Primary Calorie Production

1.2 Primary and Secondary Metabolites

1.3 The Carbon Cycle

1.4 The Nitrogen Cycle

1.5 Heterotroph Lifestyles

1.5.1 Ingestive Heterotrophs

1.5.2 Absorptive Heterotrophs

1.6 Agroecological Applications

2 Evolution and Symbiosis (Elizabeth Gall)

2.1 Fitness and Genes

2.2 Species

2.3 Evolution and Evolutionary Pressures

2.4 Coevolution and Symbiosis

2.4.1 Mutualism

2.4.2 Predators and Prey

2.4.3 Competition

2.4.4 Commensalism and Parasitism

2.5 Context Dependence of Symbiosis

2.6 Agroecological Applications

3 Population Dynamics (Elizabeth Gall)

3.1 Energy Flow in Ecosystems

3.2 Growth Curves

3.3 Carrying Capacity and Population Cycles

3.4 Agroecological Applications

4 The Kingdom Fungi (Steven Stephenson and Elizabeth Gall)

4.1 Basic Structures of Fungi

4.2 Basic Classification of Fungi and Fungus-Like Organisms

4.2.1 Slime Molds

4.3 Taxonomy of Macrofungi

4.4 Taxonomy of Microfungi

4.5 Sexual Reproduction

4.5.1 Basidiomycetes

4.5.2 Ascomycetes

4.6 Asexual and Sexual Stages

4.7 Fundamental Niches of Fungi

4.7.1 Saprotrophic Fungi

4.7.2 Fungi in Symbioses

4.8 Secondary Metabolites of Interest

4.8.1 Culinary Use

4.8.2 Poisons or Toxins

4.8.3 Medicinal Compounds

5 Limiting Factors in Agriculture (Noureddine Benkeblia)

5.1 Meteorological Limiting Factors

5.1.1 Extreme Temperature as a Limiting Factor

5.1.1.1 High Temperatures

5.1.1.2 Low Temperatures

5.1.1.3 Long-Term Effects of Extreme Temperatures

5.1.2 CO2 Concentration as a Limiting Factor

5.2 Where Meteorological and Land Factors Meet: Water as a Limiting Factor

5.3 Limiting Land Factors: Nutrient Supply

5.3.1 Nitrogen (N)

5.3.2 Phosphorus (P)

5.3.3 Potassium (K)

6 Principles of Crop Breeding and Productivity (Elizabeth Gall)

6.1 Artificial Evolutionary Pressure

6.2 Metabolite Limits of Selective Breeding

6.3 Photosynthetic Limits of Selective Breeding

6.4 Evolved Alternatives to C3 Photosynthesis

6.4.1 C4 Photosynthesis

6.4.2 CAM Photosynthesis

6.4.3 Evolutionary Limits

6.5 Other Methods to Increase Yields and Efficiency

6.5.1 Intercropping

6.5.2 Crop Rotation

6.5.3 Directed Genetic Modification

6.6 Developing Cooperative Varieties of Plants and Fungi

7 Pests and Pest Management Methods (Juan F. Barrera)

7.1 Humans Versus Pests

7.2 Pest Management Strategies and Tactics

7.3 Economics and Ecology of Pests

7.3.1 The Economic Approach

7.3.2 The Ecological Approach

7.3.2.1 r-Pests

7.3.2.2 K-Pests

7.3.2.3 Intermediate Pests

7.4 The Future of Pest Management

7.4.1 Biologically Intensive IPM

7.4.2 Agroecologically Integrated Pest Management

7.4.3 Ecologically Based Pest Management (EBPM)

7.4.4 Total System Approach

7.4.5 Integrated Management of Biodiversity (IMB)

7.4.6 Integrated Crop Management (ICM)

7.4.7 Integrated Production

7.4.8 Integrated Agroecosystem Design and Management (IADM)

7.4.9 Crop Health and Salutogenesis

7.4.10 Holistic Pest Management (HPM)

7.5 Conclusion

8 Economic Factors in Agriculture (Elizabeth Gall and Barbara Laff)

8.1 Supply and Demand

8.1.1 Agricultural Supply: Balancing Inputs and Outputs with Costs and Income

8.1.2 Agricultural Demand: Glut Price Cycles

8.2 Farm Sizes and Types

8.2.1 Farm Consolidation

8.3 Market Distortions

8.3.1 Government Interventions

8.4 Other Factors

8.4.1 Ecological Considerations

8.4.2 Intellectual Property Law

8.4.2.1 Plants as Intellectual Property

8.4.2.2 Patents and Seed Re-Use

8.5 Conclusion

9 The Green Revolution: Agricultural Shifts of the 20th Century (Elizabeth Gall)

9.1 The United States: From Dust Bowl to Green Revolution

9.2 Mexico and The Initial Green Revolution

9.3 The Philippines, China, and Southeast Asia: Global Attention and Wild Success

9.4 Patterns of the Green Revolution

9.5 Environmental Impacts of High-Input Systems

9.5.1 Fertilizer

9.5.2 Irrigation

9.5.3 Monoculture

9.6 Economic Impact

9.7 Government Interventions

9.8 Conclusion

MYCOAGROECOLOGY

10 The Second Green Revolution and the Role of Mycoagroecology (Elizabeth Gall)

10.1 Mycology: Revealing the Fungal Roles of Partners, Pests, Pest-Control Agents, and Products

10.2 Agroecology: Integrating Productivity and Sustainability

10.2.1 Industrial Farms Value Production over Ecosystem Balance

10.2.2 Buffering the Ecosystem from the Farm

10.2.3 Closing the Loop: The Farm as an Island Ecosystem

10.2.4 The Farm as a Productive Portion of the Ecosystem

10.2.5 Incorporating Other Techniques

10.3 Mycoagroecology

10.3.1 Partners

10.3.2 Pests and Pest-Control Agents

10.3.3 Products

10.4 Mycoagroecology is Compatible with the Goals of the Second Green Revolution

10.4.1 Address “Orphan” Regions and Crops

10.4.2 Return to Polyculture

10.4.3 Reduce the Need for Synthetic Inputs

10.4.4 Maintain Smallholder Competitiveness

10.5 Conclusion

FUNGI AS PARTNERS

11 Plant-Fungal Mutualisms (Jason C. Slot)

11.1 Plant-Fungal Mutualisms Vary According to Plant "Compartments"

11.2 Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Fungi Colonize Diverse Plant Roots Worldwide

11.3 Ectomycorrhizal Fungi Colonize Roots of Woody Plants in Northern and Temperate Forests

11.4 Mycorrhizal Relationships are Structurally and Ecologically Diverse

11.4.1 Plants in a Community Can Benefit from Shared Mycorrhizal Networks

11.4.2 Mycoheterotrophs Exploit Plant-Fungal Mutualisms

11.5 Endophytic Fungi are Common Residents of Plant Tissues

11.6 Fungi can Provide Benefits to Other Plant Mutualisms

11.7 Plant-Fungal Mutualisms Require an Adapted Fungal Community

12 Incorporating Microbes into Agricultural Soils (Elizabeth Gall)

12.1 Types of Soil Microbes

12.1.1 Arbuscular Mycorrhizal (AM) Fungi

12.1.2 Ectomycorrhizal (ECM) Fungi

12.1.3 Root Endophytes

12.1.4 Other Soil Microbes

12.2 Industrial Agricultural Practices Destroy Soil Microbial Communities

12.2.1 Monoculture

12.2.2 Other Microbiome-Damaging Practices

12.3 Restoring Microbial Populations is Possible and Effective

12.4 Methods for Reintroducing Microbes to Agricultural Soils

12.4.1 Soil Inoculation

12.4.2 Trap Plants

12.4.3 Seed Coating

12.4.4 Monospecies vs. Community Inoculation

12.5 Management Practices for Soil Microbe Retention

12.6 Conclusion

FUNGI AS PESTS AND PEST-CONTROL AGENTS

13 Fungal Diseases in Agriculture: Significance, Management, and Control (Noureddine Benkeblia)

13.1 Significance of Fungal Diseases in Agriculture

13.2 Management and Control of Fungal Diseases in Agriculture

13.2.1 Chemical Control

13.2.2 Cultural Methods and Integrated Pest Management (IPM)

13.2.3 Biological Control Agents (BCA)

14 Fungal Pathogens in Forested Ecosystems (Denita Hadziabdic, Aaron Onufrak, and Romina Gazis)

14.1 Detection Tools and Surveillance Methods

14.2 Fusarium Dieback – Invasive Shot Hole Borers

14.2.1 Disease Biology and Impact

14.2.2 Detection and Identification of the Pathogen and Vector

14.3 Laurel Wilt

14.3.1 Disease Biology and Impact

14.3.2 Detection and Identification of the Pathogen and Vector

14.4 Thousand Cankers Disease

14.4.1 Disease Biology and Impact

14.4.2 Detection and Identification of the Pathogen and Vector

14.5 Management of Fungal Diseases in Forested Areas

14.5.1 Cultural Practices

14.5.1.1 Quarantine and Sanitation

14.5.1.2 Resource Management

14.5.1.3 Plant Breeding

14.5.2 Chemical Management

14.5.3 Biological Control

15 Fungal Interactions with Other Pests (Guillermo Valero-David and Jason C. Slot)

15.1 Insects

15.1.1 Fungi are an Important Food Source for Insects and Their Relatives

15.1.1.1 Attine Ants

15.1.1.2 Macroterminiti Termites

15.1.1.3 Ambrosia Beetles

15.1.2 Insects are Important Vectors of Plant Pathogenic Fungi

15.1.3 Fungi are Important Pathogens of Insects

15.1.3.1 Entomopathogenic Fungi in Soils

15.1.4 Fungal-Insect Interactions are Important Factors in Ecosystem Processes

15.2 Nematodes

15.2.1 Nematodes Consume Fungi, Resulting in Varied Impacts on Agroecosystems

15.2.2 Diverse Fungi Attack and Consume Nematodes

15.2.3 Nematodes and Plant Pathogenic Fungi Can Act Synergistically to Cause Plant Disease

15.2.4 Coevolution of Fungi and Nematodes Has Resulted in Diverse Associations

FUNGI AS PRODUCTS

16 Principles of Modern Fungal Cultivation (Elizabeth Gall)

16.1 Protein Value of Mushrooms

16.2 Limiting Factors in Mushroom Cultivation

16.2.1 Carbon Dioxide Concentrations

16.2.2 Carbon and Nitrogen

16.2.3 Other Macronutrients

16.2.4 Water

16.2.5 Light

16.2.6 Micronutrients

16.3 Modern Mushroom Cultivation

16.3.1 Starting Substrate

16.3.2 Mushroom Spawn

16.4 Genetic Aspects of Mushroom Cultivation

17 Integrating Fungi into Existing Farms (Elizabeth Gall)

17.1 Mushroom Cultivation Recycles Agro-Industrial Waste

17.2 Abundance of Lignocellulosic Waste

17.3 Selecting Substrates and Fungal Strains

17.4 Mushroom Cultivation Locations

17.4.1 Mushroom Cultivation in Buildings

17.4.2 Mushroom Cultivation in Woods

17.4.3 Mushroom Cultivation in Fields

17.4.4 Co-Cropping with Ectomycorrhizal Fungi

17.5 Other Potential Uses of Mushrooms

17.5.1 Mushroom Growing Kits

17.5.2 Spent Mushroom Substrate

17.5.3 Mycoremediation of Damaged Landscapes

17.5.4 Bioprospecting: “Pests” with Agricultural Utility

17.6 Conclusion

18 Fungi in Food Processing (Noureddine Benkeblia)

18.1 Fermented and Aged Food Products

18.1.1 Fermented Foods are Diverse and Numerous

18.1.2 Breads

18.1.3 Fermented Meats

18.1.4 Cheeses

18.1.5 Yogurts and Other Fermented Dairy Products

18.2 Fermented Beverages

18.2.1 Alcoholic Fruit-Based Beverages (Wines)

18.2.2 Alcoholic Grain-based Beverages (Beers)

18.2.3 Other Alcoholic Beverages

18.2.4 Non-Alcoholic Fermented Beverages

18.3 Food Additives and Ingredients

18.4 Bioprocessing and Novel Food Production by Fungi

Mycoagroecology

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A Hardback by Elizabeth Gall, Noureddine Benkeblia

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    View other formats and editions of Mycoagroecology by Elizabeth Gall

    Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
    Publication Date: 11/17/2022 12:00:00 AM
    ISBN13: 9780367335243, 978-0367335243
    ISBN10: 0367335247

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    During the 20th century, agriculture underwent many unsustainable changes for the sake of greater food production. Today, the effects of climate change are becoming ever more apparent and the global population continues to grow, placing additional pressures on agricultural systems. For this reason, it is vital to turn international agriculture towards a sustainable future capable of providing healthy, bountiful foods by using methods that preserve and reconstruct the balance of natural ecosystems.

    Fungi are an underappreciated, underutilized group of organisms with massive potential to aid in the production of healthy food and other products while also increasing the sustainability of agricultural systems. Mycoagroecology: Integrating Fungi into Agroecosystems lays the foundations for integrated fungal-agricultural understanding and management, the proposed practice of âœmycoagroecologyâ. Suitable for students and professionals of multiple disciplines, this text includes nine introductory chapters that create a firm foundation in ecosystem functioning, evolution and population dynamics, fungal biology, principles of crop breeding and pest management, basic economics of agriculture, and the history of agricultural development during the 20th century. The latter half of the text is application-oriented, integrating the knowledge from the introductory chapters to help readers understand more deeply the various roles of fungi in natural and agricultural systems:

    PARTNERS: This text explores known benefits of wild plant-fungal mutualisms, and how to foster and maintain these relationships in a productive agricultural setting.

    PESTS AND PEST CONTROL AGENTS: This text acknowledges the historical and continuing role of agriculturally significant fungal pathogens, surveying modern chemical, biotechnological, and cultural methods of controlling them and other pests. However, this book also emphasizes the strong potential of beneficial fungi to biologically control fungal, insect, and other pests.

    PRODUCTS: This text covers not just isolated production of mushrooms on specialized farms but also the potential for co-cropping mushrooms in existing plant-based farms, making farm systems more self-sustaining while adding valuable and nutritious new products. An extensive chapter is also devoted to the many historical and forward-facing uses of fungi in food preservation and processing.



    Table of Contents

    INTRODUCTION

    1 Nutrient Cycling and Trophic Lifestyles (Elizabeth Gall and Noureddine Benkeblia)

    1.1 Photosynthesis: Primary Calorie Production

    1.2 Primary and Secondary Metabolites

    1.3 The Carbon Cycle

    1.4 The Nitrogen Cycle

    1.5 Heterotroph Lifestyles

    1.5.1 Ingestive Heterotrophs

    1.5.2 Absorptive Heterotrophs

    1.6 Agroecological Applications

    2 Evolution and Symbiosis (Elizabeth Gall)

    2.1 Fitness and Genes

    2.2 Species

    2.3 Evolution and Evolutionary Pressures

    2.4 Coevolution and Symbiosis

    2.4.1 Mutualism

    2.4.2 Predators and Prey

    2.4.3 Competition

    2.4.4 Commensalism and Parasitism

    2.5 Context Dependence of Symbiosis

    2.6 Agroecological Applications

    3 Population Dynamics (Elizabeth Gall)

    3.1 Energy Flow in Ecosystems

    3.2 Growth Curves

    3.3 Carrying Capacity and Population Cycles

    3.4 Agroecological Applications

    4 The Kingdom Fungi (Steven Stephenson and Elizabeth Gall)

    4.1 Basic Structures of Fungi

    4.2 Basic Classification of Fungi and Fungus-Like Organisms

    4.2.1 Slime Molds

    4.3 Taxonomy of Macrofungi

    4.4 Taxonomy of Microfungi

    4.5 Sexual Reproduction

    4.5.1 Basidiomycetes

    4.5.2 Ascomycetes

    4.6 Asexual and Sexual Stages

    4.7 Fundamental Niches of Fungi

    4.7.1 Saprotrophic Fungi

    4.7.2 Fungi in Symbioses

    4.8 Secondary Metabolites of Interest

    4.8.1 Culinary Use

    4.8.2 Poisons or Toxins

    4.8.3 Medicinal Compounds

    5 Limiting Factors in Agriculture (Noureddine Benkeblia)

    5.1 Meteorological Limiting Factors

    5.1.1 Extreme Temperature as a Limiting Factor

    5.1.1.1 High Temperatures

    5.1.1.2 Low Temperatures

    5.1.1.3 Long-Term Effects of Extreme Temperatures

    5.1.2 CO2 Concentration as a Limiting Factor

    5.2 Where Meteorological and Land Factors Meet: Water as a Limiting Factor

    5.3 Limiting Land Factors: Nutrient Supply

    5.3.1 Nitrogen (N)

    5.3.2 Phosphorus (P)

    5.3.3 Potassium (K)

    6 Principles of Crop Breeding and Productivity (Elizabeth Gall)

    6.1 Artificial Evolutionary Pressure

    6.2 Metabolite Limits of Selective Breeding

    6.3 Photosynthetic Limits of Selective Breeding

    6.4 Evolved Alternatives to C3 Photosynthesis

    6.4.1 C4 Photosynthesis

    6.4.2 CAM Photosynthesis

    6.4.3 Evolutionary Limits

    6.5 Other Methods to Increase Yields and Efficiency

    6.5.1 Intercropping

    6.5.2 Crop Rotation

    6.5.3 Directed Genetic Modification

    6.6 Developing Cooperative Varieties of Plants and Fungi

    7 Pests and Pest Management Methods (Juan F. Barrera)

    7.1 Humans Versus Pests

    7.2 Pest Management Strategies and Tactics

    7.3 Economics and Ecology of Pests

    7.3.1 The Economic Approach

    7.3.2 The Ecological Approach

    7.3.2.1 r-Pests

    7.3.2.2 K-Pests

    7.3.2.3 Intermediate Pests

    7.4 The Future of Pest Management

    7.4.1 Biologically Intensive IPM

    7.4.2 Agroecologically Integrated Pest Management

    7.4.3 Ecologically Based Pest Management (EBPM)

    7.4.4 Total System Approach

    7.4.5 Integrated Management of Biodiversity (IMB)

    7.4.6 Integrated Crop Management (ICM)

    7.4.7 Integrated Production

    7.4.8 Integrated Agroecosystem Design and Management (IADM)

    7.4.9 Crop Health and Salutogenesis

    7.4.10 Holistic Pest Management (HPM)

    7.5 Conclusion

    8 Economic Factors in Agriculture (Elizabeth Gall and Barbara Laff)

    8.1 Supply and Demand

    8.1.1 Agricultural Supply: Balancing Inputs and Outputs with Costs and Income

    8.1.2 Agricultural Demand: Glut Price Cycles

    8.2 Farm Sizes and Types

    8.2.1 Farm Consolidation

    8.3 Market Distortions

    8.3.1 Government Interventions

    8.4 Other Factors

    8.4.1 Ecological Considerations

    8.4.2 Intellectual Property Law

    8.4.2.1 Plants as Intellectual Property

    8.4.2.2 Patents and Seed Re-Use

    8.5 Conclusion

    9 The Green Revolution: Agricultural Shifts of the 20th Century (Elizabeth Gall)

    9.1 The United States: From Dust Bowl to Green Revolution

    9.2 Mexico and The Initial Green Revolution

    9.3 The Philippines, China, and Southeast Asia: Global Attention and Wild Success

    9.4 Patterns of the Green Revolution

    9.5 Environmental Impacts of High-Input Systems

    9.5.1 Fertilizer

    9.5.2 Irrigation

    9.5.3 Monoculture

    9.6 Economic Impact

    9.7 Government Interventions

    9.8 Conclusion

    MYCOAGROECOLOGY

    10 The Second Green Revolution and the Role of Mycoagroecology (Elizabeth Gall)

    10.1 Mycology: Revealing the Fungal Roles of Partners, Pests, Pest-Control Agents, and Products

    10.2 Agroecology: Integrating Productivity and Sustainability

    10.2.1 Industrial Farms Value Production over Ecosystem Balance

    10.2.2 Buffering the Ecosystem from the Farm

    10.2.3 Closing the Loop: The Farm as an Island Ecosystem

    10.2.4 The Farm as a Productive Portion of the Ecosystem

    10.2.5 Incorporating Other Techniques

    10.3 Mycoagroecology

    10.3.1 Partners

    10.3.2 Pests and Pest-Control Agents

    10.3.3 Products

    10.4 Mycoagroecology is Compatible with the Goals of the Second Green Revolution

    10.4.1 Address “Orphan” Regions and Crops

    10.4.2 Return to Polyculture

    10.4.3 Reduce the Need for Synthetic Inputs

    10.4.4 Maintain Smallholder Competitiveness

    10.5 Conclusion

    FUNGI AS PARTNERS

    11 Plant-Fungal Mutualisms (Jason C. Slot)

    11.1 Plant-Fungal Mutualisms Vary According to Plant "Compartments"

    11.2 Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Fungi Colonize Diverse Plant Roots Worldwide

    11.3 Ectomycorrhizal Fungi Colonize Roots of Woody Plants in Northern and Temperate Forests

    11.4 Mycorrhizal Relationships are Structurally and Ecologically Diverse

    11.4.1 Plants in a Community Can Benefit from Shared Mycorrhizal Networks

    11.4.2 Mycoheterotrophs Exploit Plant-Fungal Mutualisms

    11.5 Endophytic Fungi are Common Residents of Plant Tissues

    11.6 Fungi can Provide Benefits to Other Plant Mutualisms

    11.7 Plant-Fungal Mutualisms Require an Adapted Fungal Community

    12 Incorporating Microbes into Agricultural Soils (Elizabeth Gall)

    12.1 Types of Soil Microbes

    12.1.1 Arbuscular Mycorrhizal (AM) Fungi

    12.1.2 Ectomycorrhizal (ECM) Fungi

    12.1.3 Root Endophytes

    12.1.4 Other Soil Microbes

    12.2 Industrial Agricultural Practices Destroy Soil Microbial Communities

    12.2.1 Monoculture

    12.2.2 Other Microbiome-Damaging Practices

    12.3 Restoring Microbial Populations is Possible and Effective

    12.4 Methods for Reintroducing Microbes to Agricultural Soils

    12.4.1 Soil Inoculation

    12.4.2 Trap Plants

    12.4.3 Seed Coating

    12.4.4 Monospecies vs. Community Inoculation

    12.5 Management Practices for Soil Microbe Retention

    12.6 Conclusion

    FUNGI AS PESTS AND PEST-CONTROL AGENTS

    13 Fungal Diseases in Agriculture: Significance, Management, and Control (Noureddine Benkeblia)

    13.1 Significance of Fungal Diseases in Agriculture

    13.2 Management and Control of Fungal Diseases in Agriculture

    13.2.1 Chemical Control

    13.2.2 Cultural Methods and Integrated Pest Management (IPM)

    13.2.3 Biological Control Agents (BCA)

    14 Fungal Pathogens in Forested Ecosystems (Denita Hadziabdic, Aaron Onufrak, and Romina Gazis)

    14.1 Detection Tools and Surveillance Methods

    14.2 Fusarium Dieback – Invasive Shot Hole Borers

    14.2.1 Disease Biology and Impact

    14.2.2 Detection and Identification of the Pathogen and Vector

    14.3 Laurel Wilt

    14.3.1 Disease Biology and Impact

    14.3.2 Detection and Identification of the Pathogen and Vector

    14.4 Thousand Cankers Disease

    14.4.1 Disease Biology and Impact

    14.4.2 Detection and Identification of the Pathogen and Vector

    14.5 Management of Fungal Diseases in Forested Areas

    14.5.1 Cultural Practices

    14.5.1.1 Quarantine and Sanitation

    14.5.1.2 Resource Management

    14.5.1.3 Plant Breeding

    14.5.2 Chemical Management

    14.5.3 Biological Control

    15 Fungal Interactions with Other Pests (Guillermo Valero-David and Jason C. Slot)

    15.1 Insects

    15.1.1 Fungi are an Important Food Source for Insects and Their Relatives

    15.1.1.1 Attine Ants

    15.1.1.2 Macroterminiti Termites

    15.1.1.3 Ambrosia Beetles

    15.1.2 Insects are Important Vectors of Plant Pathogenic Fungi

    15.1.3 Fungi are Important Pathogens of Insects

    15.1.3.1 Entomopathogenic Fungi in Soils

    15.1.4 Fungal-Insect Interactions are Important Factors in Ecosystem Processes

    15.2 Nematodes

    15.2.1 Nematodes Consume Fungi, Resulting in Varied Impacts on Agroecosystems

    15.2.2 Diverse Fungi Attack and Consume Nematodes

    15.2.3 Nematodes and Plant Pathogenic Fungi Can Act Synergistically to Cause Plant Disease

    15.2.4 Coevolution of Fungi and Nematodes Has Resulted in Diverse Associations

    FUNGI AS PRODUCTS

    16 Principles of Modern Fungal Cultivation (Elizabeth Gall)

    16.1 Protein Value of Mushrooms

    16.2 Limiting Factors in Mushroom Cultivation

    16.2.1 Carbon Dioxide Concentrations

    16.2.2 Carbon and Nitrogen

    16.2.3 Other Macronutrients

    16.2.4 Water

    16.2.5 Light

    16.2.6 Micronutrients

    16.3 Modern Mushroom Cultivation

    16.3.1 Starting Substrate

    16.3.2 Mushroom Spawn

    16.4 Genetic Aspects of Mushroom Cultivation

    17 Integrating Fungi into Existing Farms (Elizabeth Gall)

    17.1 Mushroom Cultivation Recycles Agro-Industrial Waste

    17.2 Abundance of Lignocellulosic Waste

    17.3 Selecting Substrates and Fungal Strains

    17.4 Mushroom Cultivation Locations

    17.4.1 Mushroom Cultivation in Buildings

    17.4.2 Mushroom Cultivation in Woods

    17.4.3 Mushroom Cultivation in Fields

    17.4.4 Co-Cropping with Ectomycorrhizal Fungi

    17.5 Other Potential Uses of Mushrooms

    17.5.1 Mushroom Growing Kits

    17.5.2 Spent Mushroom Substrate

    17.5.3 Mycoremediation of Damaged Landscapes

    17.5.4 Bioprospecting: “Pests” with Agricultural Utility

    17.6 Conclusion

    18 Fungi in Food Processing (Noureddine Benkeblia)

    18.1 Fermented and Aged Food Products

    18.1.1 Fermented Foods are Diverse and Numerous

    18.1.2 Breads

    18.1.3 Fermented Meats

    18.1.4 Cheeses

    18.1.5 Yogurts and Other Fermented Dairy Products

    18.2 Fermented Beverages

    18.2.1 Alcoholic Fruit-Based Beverages (Wines)

    18.2.2 Alcoholic Grain-based Beverages (Beers)

    18.2.3 Other Alcoholic Beverages

    18.2.4 Non-Alcoholic Fermented Beverages

    18.3 Food Additives and Ingredients

    18.4 Bioprocessing and Novel Food Production by Fungi

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