UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Specialty mushrooms such as oyster are relatively easy to grow on a small scale, making them attractive to those looking to diversify a farm, engage in a hobby or launch a small business. Research-based information from Penn State about producing specialty mushrooms also may benefit people from a war-torn region of Africa.
A recent Penn State Extension webinar, “Specialty Mushrooms Cultivation 101,” covered different mushroom varieties and the supplies and equipment needed to grow at home. The webinar was a hit, with 116 people from nine U.S. states in attendance.
Also among the audience were 14 Southern Cameroonian refugees who tuned in from the Ogoja refugee camp in Nigeria. Interested in growing specialty mushrooms to start making a living in Nigeria, the refugees attended the webinar at no cost.
Penn State Extension held the webinar in collaboration with Virginia Cooperative Extension, as Beth Sastre, a commercial horticulturist in Loudoun County, Virginia, helped facilitate the session.
Maria Gorgo-Gourovitch, horticulture extension educator and affiliate faculty instructor for Penn State’s Department of Plant Pathology and Environmental Microbiology, helped lead the webinar. She discussed current international production data, economic impact and nutrition of specialty mushrooms.
Mushrooms have seen increased consumer demand. According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Agricultural Statistics Service, the value of sales for commercially grown specialty mushrooms in 2021-22 totaled $87.3 million, up 32% from the 2020-21 season.
Gorgo-Gourovitch explained that the reports show increases in brown, specialty and organic mushrooms — market growth that points to increasingly health-conscious consumers. Often called the superfood of the produce section, mushrooms contain powerful nutrients and are low-sodium, low-calorie, and cholesterol and fat-free. Mushrooms have more protein than most vegetables, are rich in vitamin D, and can benefit cognition and disease-fighting, according to recent studies.