Delignification of palm-press fibre by white-rot fungi for enzymic saccharification of cellulose.
1993
Tong Chow Chin | Chew Saw Lee | Mohd Noor Wahab
Palm-press fibres were inoculated with fungal mycelium of ten different isolates of white rot-fungi namely: Pleurotus sajor-caju I, II, and III: Pleurotus florida; Lentinula edode I, II, III, IV and V and Ganoderma licidum. The inoculated fibres were incubated for a period of up three months. Of the fungi tested, Pleurotus sajor-caju I, III and P. florida were found to be the best lignin degraders, decreasing the lignin content by as much as 35 percent. This corresponded to an increase of 21 percent in the digestibility of the fibres. Lignin showed the largest proportionate loss during the growth of these fungi; cellulose and hemicellulose showed the lowest loss for incubation of up to two months. Degradation of hemicellulose seemed to take place later than lignin and cellulose. Some isolates of L. edodes preferably attacked the lignin component while leaving the cellulose and hemicellulose untouched; its rate of degradation however, was slower than Pleurotus spp. G. lucidum was a poor lignin degrader and under the present conditions preferred to utilise hemicellulose rather than cellulose for growth.
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