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Posts Tagged ‘fungi’

Fungi Farm Prototype Turns Waste Plastic into Edible Treats

15 Dec

[ By WebUrbanist in Conceptual & Futuristic & Technology. ]

fungi muratium toxic waste

Breaking down one of the most difficult types of trash, this incredible working incubator turns sterilized plastic remnants into nutritional biomass humans can consume and digest, in short: food. Texture, taste and flavor depend upon the strain of fungus, but reportedly can be quite strong as well as quite sweet.

fungus growth system

fungi plastic utensil set

fungi eating good

Livin Studio, an Austrian design group known for innovative work on insect farms, has built a working model of this growth sphere (dubbed the Fungi Mutarium) that takes parts of mushrooms usually left uneaten and grows them into fresh snacks.

fungi eating growth sphere

From the creators: “We were working with fungi named Schizophyllum Commune and Pleurotus Ostreatus. They are found throughout the world and can be seen on a wide range of timbers and many other plant-based substrates virtually anywhere in Europe, Asia, Africa, the Americas and Australia. Next to the property of digesting toxic waste materials, they are also commonly eaten. As the fungi break down the plastic ingredients and don’t store them, like they do with metals, they are edible.”

fungi incubation chamber diagram

In terms of the process, “Fungi Mutarium is a prototype that grows edible fungal biomass, mainly the mycelium, as a novel food product. Fungi is cultivated on specifically designed agar shapes that the designers called FU.  Agar is a seaweed based gelatin substitute and acts, mixed with starch and sugar, as a nutrient base for the fungi. The FUs are filled with plastics. The fungi is then inserted, it digests the plastic and overgrows the whole substrate. The shape of the FU is designed so that it holds the plastic and to offer the fungi a lot of surface to grow on. “

fungus diagram design

For now, the digestion is a relatively slow process, taking up to a few months for a set of cultures to fully mature, but by the standards of plastic biodegrading in nature this is still an extraordinary feat. The team continues to work with university researchers to make the process faster and more efficient. “Scientific research has shown that fungi can degrade toxic and persistent waste materials such as plastics, converting them into edible fungal biomass.”

fungi edible grown creaiton

fungi plastic eating design

This novel application comes just a few years after a group of Yale students discovered a species of fungi on a trip to Ecuador as part of a Rainforest Expedition and Labratory led by a molecular biochemist. Even in the absence of light and air, the species they examined thrived in landfill environments, suggesting potential near-future and larger-scale solution for existing waste sites as well.

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[ By WebUrbanist in Conceptual & Futuristic & Technology. ]

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Magpie ink cap fungi growing & liquefying timelapse

09 Dec

This time-lapse depicts a woodland floor with a Magpie Ink Cap, Coprinus picacea growing and liquefying. Filmed by Neil Bromhall for www.rightplants4me.co.uk The blackish brown cap is covered with a white veil which cracks apart when growing, leaving scaly white patches. The cap liquefies to allow the mature spores to be exposed to the wind and carried away for dispersal. This was filmed in my studio over a period of three days using Nikon D300 cameras, Ellinchrom studio flash, humidifier and time lapse track Exposure interval 5 minutes Music ‘Middle England’ by Debbie Wiseman filmed by Neil Bromhall

 
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Posted in Nikon Videos

 

Earthstar fungi rising time lapse

08 Dec

Time lapse Earthstar fungi splitting open and then rising off the forest floor. It raises itself up so that the puff-ball is above the leaf litter and gets a better chance of being struck by raindrops which expels its spores. Filmed by Neil Bromhall copyright www.complete-gardens.co.uk Filmed in my studio using Nikon D300, 35mm and 55mm lens with studio flash. 20 minute interval.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 
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Posted in Nikon Videos