Combining biologic pretreatment with storage is an innovative approach for improving feedstock characteristics and cost, but
the magnitude of responses of such systems to upsets is unknown. Unsterile wheat straw stems were upgraded for 12 wk with
Pleurotus ostreatus at constant temperature to estimate the variation in final compositions with variations in initial moisture and inoculum.
Degradation rates and conversions increased with both moisture and inoculum. A regression analysis indicated that system performance
was quite stable with respect to inoculum and moisture content after 6 wk of treatment. Scale-up by 150× indicated that system
stability and final straw composition are sensitive to inoculum source, history, and inoculation method. Comparative testing
of straw-thermoplastic composites produced from upgraded stems is under way.
Index Entries Fungal upgrading - engineered storage - biological preprocessing -
Pleurotus ostreatus
- straw composite