Latin name of the genus and species of the plant claimed: Hypsizigus marmoreus.
This invention relates to a new and distinct variety of mushroom plant of Bunashimeji mushroom, Hypsizigus marmoreus. This new variety named ‘Hokuto-18’ cultivated by repeated breeding of Bunashimeji mushrooms having dominant traits, which is tasty and less bitter to the taste, has excellent quality, pleasing appearance, good keeping quality and storage life and ensure stability, reproducibility and uniformity.
Whereas the Bunashimeji mushroom has been so far cultivated artificially and widely eaten, the Bunashimeji mushroom produced by gathering and artificially cultivating wild mushrooms tastes unpleasantly bitter.
The Bunashimeji mushroom has a cap (pileus) with mottles. The mottles of the artificially cultivated Bunashimeji mushroom take various forms such as clear mottles, minute mottles or dilute mottles. The fine mottles, which are characteristic of the Bunashimeji mushroom, improve the appearance of the mushroom and prove to be good in quality. The thicknesses of the stem and cap of the mushroom affect eating quality. It is of course that the mushroom having good eating quality is superior in quality of goods. It is therefore significant to find suitable varieties of mushroom out of wild Bunashimeji mushrooms in order to improve the varieties as much as possible.
Furthermore, the perishable mushroom gradually deteriorates in flavor and quality when being preserved for a while after harvesting. Thus, there has been a need for mushrooms having good keeping quality and storage life so as not to degrade their quality during the course of distribution. However, it is disadvantageously difficult to find suitable fungal strains having good qualitative character and high quality from a huge variety of wild mushrooms gathered and screened carefully.
The present invention is a new and distinct variety of mushroom characterized particularly by its good qualitative character and appearance, good keeping quality and storage life and delicious tasting, which can be cultivated by gathering and repeated breeding of fungal strains having dominant traits and is exquisite in stability, reproducibility and uniformity when being produced. This novel and distinct variety of mushroom is identified as ‘Hokuto-18’.
This invention relates to a new and distinct variety of mushroom plant of Bunashimeji mushroom, Hypsizigus marmoreus, named ‘Hokuto-18’, which is cultivated by repeatedly breeding Bunashimeji mushrooms having dominant traits. This new variety of mushroom is very tasty and not bitter, has excellent quality, pleasing appearance, good keeping quality and storage life and ensure stability, reproducibility and uniformity.
The new variety ‘Hokuto-18’ according to the invention has been deposited at “International Organism Depository” of National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology under Deposit No. FERM P-20537.
One actual sample of the new variety ‘Hokuto-18’ of the invention is shown in
The new variety ‘Hokuto-18’ of the invention is produced from two parental cultivars, each cultivated by repeatedly breeding Bunashimeji mushrooms. One of the parental cultivars was produced and uniquely named ‘Hokuto Jyurokugokin’ (‘Hokuto-16’), and another cultivar is white Bunashimeji mushrooms, which was likewise produced and uniquely named ‘Hokuto Shiro Ichigoukin’.
The parental cultivar ‘Hokuto-16’ was obtained by breeding of ‘Hokuto Jyuichigokin’ (‘Hokuto-11’), which has been registered in the Japanese Plant Variety Register under Variety Registration No. 12049 on Mar. 15, 2004, and fungal strains uniquely code-named ‘MH025143’ . ‘Hokuto-16’ has not been patented in the United States.
The ‘Hokuto Shiro Ichigoukin’ was obtained by breeding of a variety ‘Hokuto Hachigoukin’ (‘Hokuto-8’), which was once registered in the Japanese Plant Variety Register, and a variety ‘Hokuto Jyunigoukin’ (‘Hokuto-12’) registered in the Japanese Plant Variety Register under Variety Registration No. 10749 and exposing the varieties thus bred to ultraviolet rays to consequently turn whiter or lighter. The ‘Hokuto Shiro Ichigoukin’ has been registered in the Japanese Plant Variety Register under Variety Registration No. 13294. This variety has been applied for a United States patent and published under No. 20040025215, now plant patent 16,294, issued Feb. 28, 2006.
The processes of breeding and cultivating ‘Hokuto-18’ according to the invention will be described hereinafter.
[Breeding Process of ‘Hokuto-18’].
First, four kinds of Bunashimeji mushrooms gathered in Japan were crossed repeatedly to produce the aforementioned ‘Hokuto-16’ and white Bunashimeji mushrooms ‘Hokuto Shiro Ichigoukin’ before October 2001.
The ‘Hokuto-16’ has good morphological characters, i.e. fleshy stem and cap, clear mottles and good quality, but it has poor keeping quality. Meanwhile, the white Bunashimeji mushroom is superior in quality and keeping quality and storage life and different in whiteness from existing Bunashimeji mushrooms.
Crossbreeding of ‘Hokuto-16’ and white Bunashimeji mushrooms was performed to develop 628 new breed strains of mushrooms in April 2003. Then, cultivation experiments were carried out for verifying the trait characters of these breed strains thus developed in October 2003, consequently to chase up adequate fungal strains (named ‘03HM009’) having good quality, taste and keeping quality.
Thereafter, further cultivation experiments were repeatedly carried out starting from December 2003 for corroborating stability, reproducibility and uniformity of the new strains, and as a result, proved confirmation that the new fungal strains were fit for the expected purpose of the invention, thus to be named ‘Hokuto-18’ strains ultimately. The new fungal strain ‘Hokuto-18’ has been applied for a plant variety registration under the Japanese Seeds and Seedlings Law on Aug. 19, 2004 (Application No. 17353).
[Traits of new fungal strain ‘Hokuto-18’].
Juxtapositional cultivation experiments were performed several times, placing the parental cultivar of ‘Hokuto-18’ strain and commercially available varieties in juxtaposition with each other, for observing the reluctant reaction caused when the fungal strains are extraneous to each other. As a result, the juxtapositional cultivation experiments have shown that the parental cultivar of ‘Hokuto-18’ was extraneous to all the existing varieties (see Table 1 below).
The variety ‘Hokuto-8’ shown in Table 1 was cultivated by breeding of two fungal strains naturally grown in a mountain in Nagano of Japan in March 1992.
The control variety, Bunashimeji mushroom, grown in Nagano of Japan was commercially available from a supermarket in Japan. Another control variety, Bunashimeji mushroom, grown in Niigata of Japan was also commercially available from a supermarket in Japan.
The experiments for the aforementioned reluctant reaction were performed by inoculating the ‘Hokuto-18’ strains and the control strains on a potato dextrose agar medium with a distance of 3 centimeters. After conducting the cultivation at 25° C. for 28 days, the reluctant reaction of the testing strains was measured. The results of the experiments for the reluctant reaction confirmed that the ‘Hokuto-18’ of the invention is new and distinct.
The state of cultivating the ‘Hokuto-18’ mushrooms in bottles is shown in
(a) When the ‘Hokuto-18’ strain was cultivated on a malt extract agar medium, it was roundly grown so that the fungal threads thereof were grown to 36.98 mm for ten days. The ‘Hokuto-18’ strain resultantly grown has white fungal threads brought up densely with a great number of aerial hyphae.
(b) When the ‘Hokuto-18’ strain was cultivated on a potato dextrose agar medium, it was roundly grown so that the fungal threads thereof were grown to 36.69 mm for ten days. The ‘Hokuto-18’ strain resultantly grown has white fungal threads brought up densely with a great number of aerial hyphae.
(c) After inoculating the seed fungi of ‘Hokuto-18’ strain of 5 mm in diameter on the potato dextrose agar medium, the cultivation of the strain was conducted at intervals of 5° C. within 5° C. to 35° C. Measurement of growth of the fungal threads of the strain on the cultivating experiments conducted for 15 days showed much more growth of the fungal threads per day at 25° C.
[Cultivation method] The cultivation was conducted using a bottle containing sawdust culture medium. The bottle of polypropylene, having a capacity of 800 cc, was used. The culture medium used in the cultivation was prepared by mixing sawdust of broad leaf tree and cedar as a carrier with rice bran by three to one and adding water to the carrier to 65% of moisture content of the carrier. The culture medium thus prepared was sterilized by heating at a high temperature of 120° C. for 40 minutes under high pressure, and then, cooled to about 20° C. Thereafter, the seed fungi were inoculated on the culture medium thus prepared, and therefore, cultivated at 20° C. for 70 days. (The same culture medium as above was used.) Upon completion of cultivation, fungus scratching on the culture medium and sprouting of the seed fungi were performed at a temperature of 15° C. and at a humidity of 90% to breed fungal strains. After gemmation, the fungal strains thus bred were further nurtured at a temperature of 15° C., at a humidity of 95% and at an illumination intensity of 100 Lux. Then, resultantly grown mushrooms were harvested when the caps thereof reach maturity.
The new variety ‘Hokuto-18’ grown in the manner as described above has the following trait characteristics. The ‘Hokuto-18’ has a pileus (cap) with an arched top having a central part of yellow tea color and a peripheral part of isabella color. Distinct mottles are distributed all over the upper surface of the fungous pileus except for the periphery thereof. The gills of the fungus are white and normal. The stem is white, shortish, eccentric to the cap and not hairy and has a medium-sized diameter. Eventually there could be harvested 56 strains having a weight of about 111.1 grams on an average and a length of over 2 centimeters.
The distinct differences in trait characters of the new variety ‘Hokuto-18’ and most similar variety are shown in Table 2 below:
1Color chart: Royal Horticultural Society. Fifth Edition
The differences in growth of fungal hyphae among the new variety ‘Hokuto-18’ and control varieties ‘Hokuto-8’ and ‘Hokuto-16’ are shown in Table 3 and
The new variety ‘Hokuto-18’ was compared in eating-quality characteristics with control varieties available in the market. The new variety ‘Hokuto-18’ and the control varieties are shown in
First, Bunashimeji mushroom samples each having a fruit body of 100 grams were heated in a microwave oven (500W) for 70 minutes, and then, cooled at room temperature. Thereafter, blind tasting tests were conducted among 30 tasting testers to confirm the taste of the new variety ‘Hokuto-18’ compared to the control varieties available in the market with respect to daintiness, bitterness and firmness. The result of the tasting tests is shown in Table 3. As is evident from the tasting result, the new variety ‘Hokuto-18’ was assessed by almost all of tasting testers as delicious, not bitter and pleasingly crunchy compared to the control varieties.
Out of 30 tasting testers, 100% appraised as delicious. 93% of the testers appraised ‘Hokuto-18’ as not bitter. The tasting results show that the new variety ‘Hokuto-18’ is deliciously flavored.
Preservation tests were carried out using the new variety ‘Hokuto-18’ and the control varieties available in the market. The preservation tests were conducted by packaging the varieties after harvesting to prepare 20 test packs, keeping the test packs in corrugated board boxes at 8° C. for 6 days, and further preserving them at 25° C. after the 7th day. The results of the preservation tests are shown in Table 5 below, showing that the quality of the new variety Hokuto-18 could be congruously kept in quality after the 12th day of harvesting as well. Thus, the new variety ‘Hokuto-18’ has apparently better keeping quality than the other existing varieties available in the market.
The results of the aforementioned preservation tests show that the new variety ‘Hokuto-18’ has good keeping quality.
The juxtapositional cultivations shown in
As is apparent from the foregoing description, the new variety ‘Hokuto-18’ according to the invention is apparently distinct in morphological trait character from the other similar varieties and is exquisite in stability, reproducibility and uniformity in comparison with the existing varieties of this sort.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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17353 | Aug 2004 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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20060041984 | Yamazaki et al. | Feb 2006 | P1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060041984 P1 | Feb 2006 | US |