Edible mushrooms of the genus Pleurotus as biocontrol agents of parasites of importance for livestock
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.33885/sf.2021.52.1375Abstract
Background: Edible mushrooms have nutraceutical properties, mainly in humans, animals and plants. Pleurotus species represent an alternative approach to parasite control because they have nematocidal activity against different taxonomic genera of nematodes of importance for livestock (e.g., eggs and infective and histotrophic larvae of Haemonchus contortus), as well as against other parasites of importance in animal health.
Objective: To present a general overview of fungi of the genus Pleurotus and their characteristics as a sustainable method of biocontrol for parasitic nematodes of animals with importance in public health.
Methods: This bibliographic review was carried out by consulting published studies on edible fungi of the genus Pleurotus and analyzing their properties related to nematocidal activity. The works were grouped according to their research focus; works related to keywords and topics in livestock were identified in indexed journals and on digital platforms.
Results and conclusions: Pleurotus spp. produce different secondary metabolites with antiparasitic activities, mainly anthelmintic and particularly against gastrointestinal nematodes and their larval stages. The characteristics of these fungi are excellent for biotechnological applications since they produce a wide range of secondary metabolites in different parts, such as in the basidiomas, mycelia and degraded substrates.
Downloads
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright notice
Open access policy
The authors who publish in this journal accept the following conditions:
In accordance with copyright laws, Scientia Fungorum recognizes and respects the authors’ moral rights, as well as the ownership of property rights, which will be transferred to the journal for dissemination in open access. Scientia Fungorum does not charge for submission and processing of articles for publication.
All the texts published by Scientia Fungorum –with no exception– are distributed under a Creative Commons License Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0), which allows third parties to use the publication as long as the work’s authorship and its first publication in this journal are mentioned.
The authors can enter into independent and additional contractual agreements for the nonexclusive distribution of the version of the article published in Scientia Fungorum (for example include it into an institutional repository or publish it in a book) as long as it is clearly and explicitly indicated that the work was published for the first time in Scientia Fungorum.
For all the above, the authors shall send the form of Letter-transfer of Property Rights for the first publication duly filled in and signed by the author(s). This form must be sent as a complementary file.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International license (CC-By-NC-SA 4.0).