Successes and Challenges to Ectomycorrhizal Mushroom Cultivation

When

February 9, 2026    
7:00 pm - 9:00 pm

Where

Event Type

Successes and Challenges to Ectomycorrhizal Mushroom Cultivation

Our February member meeting will feature speaker Ryan Franke remotely via Zoom

Attempts to cultivate mushrooms of ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) over the past fifty years have encountered many challenges while producing small gains, yet the unique potential benefits of EMF mushroom cultivation systems are driving cultivation research programs forward. During this presentation, various methods that have been developed for producing ectomycorrhizae on suitable hosts will be presented. Furthermore, cultivation case studies for three different EMF species –chanterelle, saffron milk cap, North American pecan truffle–will be reviewed, highlighting the challenges and successes experienced by researchers in this nascent field as they seek to achieve unprecedented mastery in mushroom cultivation.

This meeting is free and open to the public. Presentations are recorded and posted on the MMS YouTube channel. Members receive Zoom links on meeting announcements and reminders. Anyone can click the button below to provide their contact info and receive the Zoom link for this meeting.

 
A man with short brown hair and a beard smiles while leaning against a tree in a wooded area. He is wearing a maroon shirt, and sunlight filters through the green foliage in the background.

Ryan Franke grew up in Eagan, MN, and learned to revere the natural world at a young age. During a fall camping trip around Lake Superior in 2015, he became fascinated with fungi and shortly thereafter joined the Minnesota Mycological Society. His fascination with fungi mushroomed after joining the society, opening a gourmet mushroom cultivation business in 2017, editing the MMS newsletter from 2018-2020, and most recently joining the mycology-focused Forest Pathology Lab at the UMN in 2023. Ryan is also involved in research on biological control of invasive buckthorn with native fungi. Read about his research here.

FOR MORE INFORMATION

University of Minnesota: College of Food, Agricultural and Natural Resource Sciences, Plant Pathology

How to join a Zoom meeting: You do not need a Zoom account, but you will need the Zoom app installed on your desktop or mobile device. You can either download the Zoom app in advance here. Or, you will be automatically prompted to download and install the Zoom app when you click on a meeting link for the first time. You can also join a test meeting at any time at https://zoom.us/test.  Watch a video on how to join a Zoom meeting here.

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