J. Falandysz et al., SILVER UPTAKE BY AGARICUS-BISPORUS FROM AN ARTIFICIALLY ENRICHED SUBSTRATE, Zeitschrift fur Lebensmittel-Untersuchung und -Forschung, 199(3), 1994, pp. 225-228
The champignon mushroom Agaricus bisporus was cultivated on compost (w
heat and rye straw, hens' manure, gypsum, urea and peat) artificially
fortified with silver nitrate added at four different concentrations (
0.01, 0.1, 1.0 and 10.3 mg/kg) and 0 mg/kg (control) on a dry weight b
asis. The method of measurement was flame atomic absorption spectropho
tometry after dry ashing of the samples at 420-degrees-C and dissolvin
g the residue in 1 M nitric acid. The highest concentration of silver,
reaching between 120+/-30-150+/-36 mg/kg on a dry weight basis, was o
bserved in fruit bodies grown on the most contaminated substrate conta
ining 10.3 mg added Ag/kg dry weight. The silver concentration in caps
/stalks/whole fruit bodies of A. bisporus was positively correlated (r
=0.72; P<0.001) with an increasing level of fortification of the subst
rate. The bioconcentration factor (BCF) of silver in caps/stalks/whole
fruit bodies of A. bisporus was inversely correlated (-0.44<r<-0.36;
0.001<p<0.01) with the silver concentration of the contaminated substr
ate. The highest silver BCF value of 120-230 has been observed in caps
and stalks of mushrooms grown on a substrate enriched with 0.01 mg Ag
/kg dry weight. Silver ion added to the substrate in concentrations up
to 10.3 mg/kg on a dry weight basis exhibited no observable toxic eff
ect against the mycelial growth and fruiting of A. bisporus.