Article
Details
Citation
Dhungana A, Thomas PW, Wilson C, Sanderson R & Jump A (2025) Mycoforestry with the Saffron Milk Cap (Lactarius deliciosus L.:Fr. S.F. Gray) and Its Potential as a Large-Scale Food Production System. Diversity, 17 (12), Art. No.: 821. https://doi.org/10.3390/d17120821
Abstract
Mycoforestry, a farming system that produces edible fungi crops in forest plantations through controlled mycorrhizal symbiosis, has the potential to enhance biodiversity in forestry plantations and mitigate some of the negative impacts associated with modern agriculture, such as soil erosion, habitat degradation, and carbon emissions. Mycoforestry systems typically exploit a range of native fungi that can be inoculated into planting stock of commercial tree species, with biodiversity benefits delivered through expanded habitat provision for the fungi and a range of other organisms through alterations to stand structure. One mycoforestry system showing strong potential for commercial viability involves the cultivation of Lactarius deliciosus (L.:Fr.) S.F. Gray in Pinaceae plantations. This review aims to evaluate the benefits of mycoforestry systems with a focus on Lactarius deliciosus (L.:Fr.) as a case study. It will review the state of the art and discuss technical developments necessary for the successful large-scale application of mycoforestry systems.
Keywords
mycoforestry; Lactarius deliciosus; non-timber forest products; ectomycorrhizal fungi innoculation; ectomycorrhizai fungi in-vitro cultivation; fungal ecology
Journal
Diversity: Volume 17, Issue 12
| Status | Published |
|---|---|
| Publication date | 30/11/2025 |
| Publication date online | 30/11/2025 |
| Date accepted by journal | 27/10/2025 |
| URL | http://hdl.handle.net/1893/37809 |
| Publisher | MDPI AG |
| eISSN | 1424-2818 |
People (3)
PhD Researcher, Biological and Environmental Sciences
Dean of Natural Sciences, NS Management and Support
Professor, Biological and Environmental Sciences