Home | Community | Message Board

Out-Grow.com - Mushroom Growing Kits & Supplies
This site includes paid links. Please support our sponsors.


Welcome to the Shroomery Message Board! You are experiencing a small sample of what the site has to offer. Please login or register to post messages and view our exclusive members-only content. You'll gain access to additional forums, file attachments, board customizations, encrypted private messages, and much more!

Shop: Unfolding Nature Unfolding Nature: Being in the Implicate Order   North Spore North Spore Mushroom Grow Kits & Cultivation Supplies   Left Coast Kratom Buy Kratom Extract   Original Sensible Seeds High THC Strains   Kraken Kratom Red Vein Kratom   Mushroom-Hut Substrate Bags

Jump to first unread post Pages: 1
OfflineTranscendent Other
Stranger
I'm a teapot User Gallery

Registered: 04/11/20
Posts: 65
Last seen: 10 months, 30 days
What defines 'Monoculture' In relation to mushrooms?
    #26645479 - 05/03/20 08:37 AM (3 years, 9 months ago)

I understand what monoculture is in broad agriculture terms, but I had difficulty finding a definition with mushroom/fungi context. For the benefits of my theory work i'd love some clarity.

Would I be right I guessing that monoculture in regards to mushroom cultivation relates to isolating a chosen phenotype of a given yield, with the aim reproducing the desired genetic characteristics of that phenotype? And thus, once i've isolated that phenotype (say I choose a mushroom for its size), I have a monoculture?

As always, thanks in advance for your wisdom!


Extras: Filter Print Post Top
InvisibleStrainsfordaze


Registered: 05/10/18
Posts: 669
Re: What defines 'Monoculture' In relation to mushrooms? [Re: Transcendent Other]
    #26645520 - 05/03/20 09:00 AM (3 years, 9 months ago)

A monoculture for cubes would be one dikaryotic connection. It is the isolation of an individual strain.


Extras: Filter Print Post Top
OfflineKmacmo
The aborted pin
Other


Registered: 08/14/19
Posts: 1,679
Loc: Central hemisphere
Last seen: 10 hours, 24 minutes
Re: What defines 'Monoculture' In relation to mushrooms? [Re: Strainsfordaze]
    #26645634 - 05/03/20 10:17 AM (3 years, 9 months ago)

What he said, a monoculture is a single strain (2 spores make a strain).

The only legit way to get monocultures is by using agar and transferring until you have a single set of genes on your plate, this can take a long time.
MS to agar will take the longest but if you clone then carry on transferring for a monoculture that'll save some time.

Simply choosing a mushroom you like and putting it to agar will create a clone. (clones are made up of multiple strains)


--------------------


Extras: Filter Print Post Top
OfflineTranscendent Other
Stranger
I'm a teapot User Gallery

Registered: 04/11/20
Posts: 65
Last seen: 10 months, 30 days
Re: What defines 'Monoculture' In relation to mushrooms? [Re: Kmacmo]
    #26645653 - 05/03/20 10:30 AM (3 years, 9 months ago)

Excellent, thats what I need! Thanks for your wisdom :smile:


Extras: Filter Print Post Top
OfflineA.k.aM
Stranger
 User Gallery


Registered: 10/27/19
Posts: 16,816
Loc: Gaming the system
Last seen: 1 day, 1 hour
Trusted Cultivator
Re: What defines 'Monoculture' In relation to mushrooms? [Re: Transcendent Other]
    #26645838 - 05/03/20 12:06 PM (3 years, 9 months ago)

I’ve seen threads where people transfer one or two spores to a plate to do it too.

Monoculture and isolate are two of the most confusing terms used here, some use them interchangeably and some use them to mean different things.


--------------------
LAGM2020


Extras: Filter Print Post Top
OfflineTranscendent Other
Stranger
I'm a teapot User Gallery

Registered: 04/11/20
Posts: 65
Last seen: 10 months, 30 days
Re: What defines 'Monoculture' In relation to mushrooms? [Re: A.k.a]
    #26647344 - 05/04/20 01:43 AM (3 years, 9 months ago)

Quote:

A.k.a said:
Monoculture and isolate are two of the most confusing terms used here, some use them interchangeably and some use them to mean different things.



Haha well that doesn't help! I'd imagine one isolates a strain/phenotype in a effort to create a monoculture. At least that seems to make sense to me!
I also imagine that in reality it wouldn't be possible to truly isolate a phenotype (without doing so at the microscopic level)? And what is actually achieved is more a long the lines of a culture dominated by a chosen phenotype? And the more you repeat the process of cloning, the more dominant it gets?
Just thinking out loud :smile:


Extras: Filter Print Post Top
Jump to top Pages: 1

Shop: Unfolding Nature Unfolding Nature: Being in the Implicate Order   North Spore North Spore Mushroom Grow Kits & Cultivation Supplies   Left Coast Kratom Buy Kratom Extract   Original Sensible Seeds High THC Strains   Kraken Kratom Red Vein Kratom   Mushroom-Hut Substrate Bags


Similar ThreadsPosterViewsRepliesLast post
* mushroom Researcher Computer Program
( 1 2 all )
SWiTtles 6,370 24 05/18/02 06:03 PM
by ParanoidSchizoid
* Re: Legal mushrooms BrownPastures 2,614 4 05/01/01 09:43 PM
by Anonymous
* mushroom potency Mushroom_X 2,317 2 03/26/03 03:52 PM
by wiki
* Protecting Monoculture from Sceanecence pftek 1,746 7 09/02/09 08:14 PM
by Sebastien
* Monocultures.
( 1 2 all )
badman 2,676 20 07/31/09 04:25 PM
by badman
* Does cloning give you a monoculture? meehi 3,988 6 03/29/09 04:19 PM
by Shroominit
* Is this a monoculture? Maverick 2,449 16 11/30/10 07:31 PM
by Maverick
* So is this an isolate/monoculture? Ozzy 1,159 7 09/12/10 02:54 AM
by rustycobwebs

Extra information
You cannot start new topics / You cannot reply to topics
HTML is disabled / BBCode is enabled
Moderator: Shroomism, george castanza, RogerRabbit, veggie, mushboy, fahtster, LogicaL Chaos, 13shrooms, Stipe-n Cap, Pastywhyte, bodhisatta, Tormato, Land Trout, A.k.a
1,116 topic views. 39 members, 174 guests and 40 web crawlers are browsing this forum.
[ Show Images Only | Sort by Score | Print Topic ]
Search this thread:

Copyright 1997-2024 Mind Media. Some rights reserved.

Generated in 0.023 seconds spending 0.007 seconds on 12 queries.