Service
Packages
Package
1
Start
up |
Package
2
Maintenance |
Seedling
certification
Competing fungi detection |
Detection
2x year for the first 2 years
Detection annually for the next 5 years |
Truffle forming fungi detection
Truffle
forming fungi have mycorrhizal relationships with host trees. Certain
types of truffles have gained significant market value outside of farming
with some garnering wholesale prices of $500 per pound. Farmers seeking
alternative crops are cultivating truffle farms. Subsequently, a niche
market has formed to supply farmers with seedlings inoculated with truffle
forming fungi. However, according to a recent article in the New York
Times “Starting a truffle farm is a long-term investment with
huge risks.” March 1, 2006. Seedlings are expensive as well as
other long-term costs associated with truffle farming. MBT has perfected
a molecular biology based method for detecting truffle forming fungi
DNA in seedlings and trees in established truffle farms to help farmers
mitigate the risks of truffle farming.
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Competing
fungi detection
Indigenous
micro flora may have mycorrhizal forming fungi especially those in the
tuberales family that competes with the desired truffle forming fungi
(in seedlings) and in many cases eliminates the desired fungi. Before
establishing a truffle farm the farmer should determine if competing
fungi exist. MBT has the molecular biology based technique to sample
soil and existing trees to detect possible competing fungi in the desired
location(s).
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Truffle
certification
The truffle
production cycle takes up to nine years creating huge risks for truffle
farmers. Due to these and other risks associated with truffle farming,
farmers and seedling producers would benefit from authentication of
the presence of the desired truffle forming fungi on seedlings prior
to sale or purchase. MBT can analyze seedlings before they are purchased
or sold and certify the presence of the desired truffle forming fungi.
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Soil
test for competing fungi
Soil to
be used for truffle farming may already have other truffle forming fungi
of no economic importance, which can compete against the truffle fungus
that a farmer wants to cultivate. Some indegenous truffles can be detrimental
to the farming enterprise. Therefore, before a farmer invests in inoculated
seedlings and extensive site preparation, it is critical that the soil
is tested to determine the presence or absence of indegenous fungi in
the tuber family and other mycorrizal fungi.
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