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Link between research and the development of mycological resources in Québec Marie-France Gévry, M.Sc. Laval University, Québec Colloque sur les champignons et autres PFNL : innovations et perspectives August 27-28, 2014

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Page 1: Link between research and the development of mycological ......- 2,5 G$ Worldwide - 60-70 M$ for Canada : 90% from BC, the rest from Eastern provinces and Saskatchewan - Annual harvests

Link between research and the development

of mycological resources in Québec

Marie-France Gévry, M.Sc.

Laval University, Québec

Colloque sur les champignons et autres PFNL : innovations et perspectives August 27-28, 2014

Page 2: Link between research and the development of mycological ......- 2,5 G$ Worldwide - 60-70 M$ for Canada : 90% from BC, the rest from Eastern provinces and Saskatchewan - Annual harvests

Challenges and Perspectives

Research and developpement of the

resource in Quebec

Presentation outline

Economical importance of Edible

Forest mushroom (EFM)

The mycorrhizal relationship and State of

knowledge in Quebec

Page 3: Link between research and the development of mycological ......- 2,5 G$ Worldwide - 60-70 M$ for Canada : 90% from BC, the rest from Eastern provinces and Saskatchewan - Annual harvests

Economical importance of Edible

Forest mushroom (EFM) - The emergence of a lucrative global market -

- 2,5 G$ Worldwide

- 60-70 M$ for Canada : 90% from BC, the rest from Eastern

provinces and Saskatchewan

- Annual harvests increasing as a consequence of a high

demand on international markets for « Terroir » products :

- In Canada : 1,1 M of tons in 1979 to 3,29 M of tons in 2005

- In Quebec : about 50 tons in 2014 (an increased of 1 000% for

the last 5 yrs). An economic potential of 50-100 M$ CA/yr.

An opportunity for rural development and diversification of the forest resource (plus-value)

Page 4: Link between research and the development of mycological ......- 2,5 G$ Worldwide - 60-70 M$ for Canada : 90% from BC, the rest from Eastern provinces and Saskatchewan - Annual harvests

Economical importance of Edible

Forest mushroom (EFM)

Three modes of development of EFM:

- Commercial harvests (international markets)

- Recreative picking (local selling and consumption)

- Mycotourism (create regional benefits by attracting tourist)

Ex. : Spain (Castilla y leon)

- Annual benefits : 65 M €

- 40% from commercial harvest and EFM

transformation, 39% from mycotourism,

21% from recreative picking.

- 36 entreprises of transformation (source : Micodata, Gouvernement de la Castilla y León 2014).

Page 5: Link between research and the development of mycological ......- 2,5 G$ Worldwide - 60-70 M$ for Canada : 90% from BC, the rest from Eastern provinces and Saskatchewan - Annual harvests

3 main species harvested in Canada

Morels Chanterelle Matsutake

In Quebec : Macrofungi-diversity is estimated > 3 000 sp., including a great variety of valuable EFM (ceps, milky-cap, etc.)

Page 6: Link between research and the development of mycological ......- 2,5 G$ Worldwide - 60-70 M$ for Canada : 90% from BC, the rest from Eastern provinces and Saskatchewan - Annual harvests

The great majority of high-value species of EFM are symbiotic.

They need a host to grow and has to be harvested in forests.

Mushroom = pomp

+ Water

+ Nutrients

Sugars and photosynthats

(carbohydrates)

The mycorrhizal relationship

Photo : J.-A. Fortin

A renewable resource, with a great complexity

Page 7: Link between research and the development of mycological ......- 2,5 G$ Worldwide - 60-70 M$ for Canada : 90% from BC, the rest from Eastern provinces and Saskatchewan - Annual harvests

State of knowledge in Quebec

• First researches on the field has been conducted between 1989-1993 to investigate the effect of ecological factors on the ectomycorrhizal mushroom distribution (Nantel & Neumann, Villeneuve).

• First inventories targeting EFM were conducted in Abitibi by Miron (1994-1995), and in Gaspe Peninsula (Guérette, 2001).

• 2005-2010 : three researches launched in Abitibi, Lac-Saint-Jean and Gaspe peninsula area to investigate elements of the ecology of EFM (Rochon, Maneli, Gévry).

Those studies showed the importance of forest cover (Host Trees) in the distribution of EFM and their sensibility to other ecological factors :

Stand structure (age, density, schrubs and ericaceous cover, mosses and lichen cover),;

Edaphic conditions (pH, drainage, thickness and litter quality, surface deposit composition, etc.);

Topography (orientation, slope, etc.).

Page 8: Link between research and the development of mycological ......- 2,5 G$ Worldwide - 60-70 M$ for Canada : 90% from BC, the rest from Eastern provinces and Saskatchewan - Annual harvests

State of knowledge in Quebec

• Lots of surveys conducted in many regions, over 1-2 yrs, has permit to establish a list of species of interest.

• Education of the population contribute to increase local consumption and to create a pool of “pickers”

• Some mycotourism experiments have showed the economical importance of this high-value activity for rural areas.

Page 9: Link between research and the development of mycological ......- 2,5 G$ Worldwide - 60-70 M$ for Canada : 90% from BC, the rest from Eastern provinces and Saskatchewan - Annual harvests

From a forest manager and a political perspective

In its Sustainable forest management Report (2010), the « Chief Forester of Quebec » mentionned the lack of knowledge to establish the economical potential of NTFPs.

No quantitative data available for forest managers

Without a controlled management of commercial harvests : a loss for the governement and a risk of overexploitation of the resource.

Therefore, the estimation of the biological and

economical potential is needed to achieve strategic and sustainable management of the sector.

Page 10: Link between research and the development of mycological ......- 2,5 G$ Worldwide - 60-70 M$ for Canada : 90% from BC, the rest from Eastern provinces and Saskatchewan - Annual harvests

Research and Developement

of the Resource in Quebec

1. How can we achieve to integrate EFM in

forest planning ?

2. How can we optimize EFM harvest in

natural environment ?

3. How can we create value from EFM ?

Page 11: Link between research and the development of mycological ......- 2,5 G$ Worldwide - 60-70 M$ for Canada : 90% from BC, the rest from Eastern provinces and Saskatchewan - Annual harvests

Research and Developement of the

Resource

How can we achieve to integrate EFM in forest planning ?

1) Model mean annual EFM productivity (kg/ha) among forest

stand type for assessing the economic potential generated

by the development of EFM of high commercial value

Which spatiotemporal data set should be included in the

model? What is the relative contribution (%) of each set to the

precision of the model?

- Field data

- Ecoforest, deposit, hydrological , climatic maps, etc.

- Satellite data

A 3-5 years effort, stratified by bioclimatic area

Page 12: Link between research and the development of mycological ......- 2,5 G$ Worldwide - 60-70 M$ for Canada : 90% from BC, the rest from Eastern provinces and Saskatchewan - Annual harvests

Research and Developement of the

Resource

How can we achieve to integrate EFM in forest planning ?

- Can the EFM development be complementary to the timber

exploitation?

We think so because …

- Surveys showed that high-productive forest stands were young

- EFM harvest can generate benefits during more than > 10 yrs

Page 13: Link between research and the development of mycological ......- 2,5 G$ Worldwide - 60-70 M$ for Canada : 90% from BC, the rest from Eastern provinces and Saskatchewan - Annual harvests

Research and Developement of the

Resource

How can we optimize EFM harvest in natural environment ?

2.1) Enhancing productivity of forest stand by a

Mycosylvicultural approach

How can we create optimal conditions for EFM fruiting?

Ex. : Creating canopy opening, maintaining host-tree

diversity, managing to target a particular stand

structure (age), pruning trees to enhance carbon

allocation to their roots (feed the mycelium), emulating

perturbations favorable to EFM productivity

As every species has its niche : a “myco-specific” approach

Page 14: Link between research and the development of mycological ......- 2,5 G$ Worldwide - 60-70 M$ for Canada : 90% from BC, the rest from Eastern provinces and Saskatchewan - Annual harvests

Research and Developement of the

Resource

How can we optimize EFM harvest in natural environment ?

2.2) Modeling fruiting emergence to diminish field trips and

harvest loss, and optimize the benefits of the pickers.

Productivity maps can be produced using ecological factors, but

annual production of fructification is link to climatic variation.

Every species fructification response to a specific climatic

sequence that has to be elucidated.

Ex. : precipitations (mm), nb of major precipitation events, nb

day of warm temp, soil temperature, “cold-shock”, …

A long-term initiative (>10 yrs) that should imply the

amateur contribution.

Page 15: Link between research and the development of mycological ......- 2,5 G$ Worldwide - 60-70 M$ for Canada : 90% from BC, the rest from Eastern provinces and Saskatchewan - Annual harvests

Research investigations should

begin by the cep:

- Highly productive in managed

plantations (White & Norway

spruce)

- Highly sensitive to « cold-shock »

Page 16: Link between research and the development of mycological ......- 2,5 G$ Worldwide - 60-70 M$ for Canada : 90% from BC, the rest from Eastern provinces and Saskatchewan - Annual harvests

Micodata : a webmap of EFM

production in Castilla y Leon

Page 17: Link between research and the development of mycological ......- 2,5 G$ Worldwide - 60-70 M$ for Canada : 90% from BC, the rest from Eastern provinces and Saskatchewan - Annual harvests

Research and Developement of the

Resource

How can we create value from EFM?

3) Using a value chain approach to optimize

socio-economic benefits of the development

of the resource.

Identify the actors, issues and constraints

related to the activities of EFM sector;

Document the chain of value creation

(from local to international market).

Target opportunities of development

Page 18: Link between research and the development of mycological ......- 2,5 G$ Worldwide - 60-70 M$ for Canada : 90% from BC, the rest from Eastern provinces and Saskatchewan - Annual harvests

Challenges and Perspectives

Ultimately, the contribution of research should allow forest managers to integrate the EFM resource in strategic and tactical forest planning at national or regional scale, to strengthen to harvest operations, to target business opportunities and guide the social and regional development of the EFM sector in Quebec.

Challenges : lack of funding for research in this new field,

especially for long-term monitoring

Strenghts : The increasing demand from forest owners to

diversify their forests products (bottom-up) and the international demand for “bio” and “terroir” products from Quebec and Canada (top-down) will certainly help to bring consideration from policy makers for NTFPs and EFM.

Page 19: Link between research and the development of mycological ......- 2,5 G$ Worldwide - 60-70 M$ for Canada : 90% from BC, the rest from Eastern provinces and Saskatchewan - Annual harvests

Contact : [email protected]