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Pang Jialong, a former teacher at Ping Agricultural School, used corn cobs to cultivate Ganoderma lucidum and black fungus to succeed

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Recently, a delegation of experts from the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs made a special trip to the Yuanping Agricultural School to identify the new technologies of using corn cobs to cultivate Ganoderma lucidum and black fungus. The use of corn cobs to cultivate Ganoderma lucidum and black fungus is a project led by Pang Jialong, a teacher majoring in edible mushrooms at yuanping agricultural school. After years of research and trial and error, the technology was successful. It has laid a practical technical foundation for the development of edible mushroom production, the expansion of the utilization of scrap materials in the planting industry, and the transformation of scientific research achievements.

Pang Jialong, a former teacher at Ping Agricultural School, used corn cobs to cultivate Ganoderma lucidum and black fungus to succeed

Ganoderma lucidum and black fungus are the "petite ladies" in edible mushrooms, and the requirements for cultivation conditions are very high. How to reduce the cost of cultivation and improve the efficiency of production has always been the goal of people in the industry. Mr. Pang Jialong, who graduated from Shanxi Agricultural University, has been working in the microbiology room of Yuanping Agricultural University since joining the work. Over the years, he has devoted himself to the study of the cultivation of black fungus and ganoderma lucidum. Let farmers turn waste into treasure and realize the large-scale production of edible mushrooms is the subject he has been focusing on. In the past 18 years, he has continuously studied and visited many places, and has succeeded on the basis of hundreds of repeated experiments and explorations, laying a technical foundation for local farmers to use corn cobs to produce edible mushrooms on a large scale.

Pang Jialong, a former teacher at Ping Agricultural School, used corn cobs to cultivate Ganoderma lucidum and black fungus to succeed
Pang Jialong, a former teacher at Ping Agricultural School, used corn cobs to cultivate Ganoderma lucidum and black fungus to succeed
Pang Jialong, a former teacher at Ping Agricultural School, used corn cobs to cultivate Ganoderma lucidum and black fungus to succeed

"The back wave of the Yangtze River pushes the front wave, and the blue is better than the blue." Teacher Pang Jialong said: "Teacher Yang Shanshan has devoted all her life's energy to the cause of edible mushroom cultivation, brought huge benefits to farmers, and has become a deputy to the National People's Congress for 20 consecutive years. ”

Pang Jialong, a former teacher at Ping Agricultural School, used corn cobs to cultivate Ganoderma lucidum and black fungus to succeed

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