Role of Ammonia During Composting of White Button Mushroom

Ammonia (NH₃) is one of the most important compounds generated during the composting process for white button mushroom cultivation (White Button Mushroom). It plays both beneficial and harmful roles depending upon its concentration and the stage of composting.

How Ammonia is Produced

Ammonia is released when nitrogen-rich materials such as:

  • Chicken manure
  • Urea
  • Ammonium sulfate
  • Protein-rich organic matter

are decomposed by microorganisms during Phase-I composting.

The reaction can be simplified as:

Organic Nitrogen → Amino Acids → Ammonia (NH₃)

 

Advantages (Pros) of Ammonia During Composting

  1. Provides Readily Available Nitrogen

Ammonia serves as a major nitrogen source for thermophilic microorganisms responsible for compost degradation.

Benefits:

  • Faster microbial growth
  • Increased microbial biomass
  • Enhanced decomposition of straw

 

  1. Helps Break Down Lignocellulose

High ammonia levels partially disrupt lignin-carbohydrate complexes in wheat straw.

Benefits:

  • Improved straw softening
  • Better cellulose accessibility
  • Higher compost selectivity

 

  1. Increases Compost Temperature

Thermophilic microorganisms utilize ammonia-rich substrates and generate heat.

Benefits:

  • Faster temperature rise (70–80°C)
  • Better pathogen destruction
  • Weed seed elimination

 

  1. Improves C:N Ratio Adjustment

Addition of nitrogenous materials increases nitrogen content and adjusts the Carbon:Nitrogen ratio to the desired range.

Ideal initial C:N ratio:

  • 25–30:1
  1. Selective Compost Formation

Controlled ammonia production favors beneficial compost microorganisms while suppressing many competitors.

Benefits:

  • Development of mushroom-selective compost
  • Improved yield potential

 

Disadvantages (Cons) of Excess Ammonia

  1. Toxic to Mushroom Mycelium

This is the biggest concern.

Ammonia concentrations above safe limits inhibit spawn growth.

Effects:

  • Delayed spawn run
  • Poor colonization
  • Uneven growth
  • Yield reduction

Safe level at spawning:

  • Less than 0.05% NH₃
  • Ideally undetectable by smell

 

  1. Nitrogen Loss

Excess ammonia escapes into the atmosphere.

Consequences:

  • Loss of valuable nitrogen
  • Lower compost quality
  • Increased production cost

In hot Indian summers, ammonia loss can be very high.

 

  1. Environmental Pollution

Escaped ammonia contributes to:

  • Air pollution
  • Odor nuisance
  • Nitrogen deposition around farms

 

  1. Excessively High pH

Ammonia raises compost pH.

If pH exceeds 8.5–9.0:

  • Beneficial microbes become less efficient
  • Excess nitrogen volatilization occurs

 

  1. Risk of Anaerobic Composting

Heavy addition of chicken manure or urea can overstimulate microbial activity.

Results:

  • Oxygen depletion
  • Anaerobic pockets
  • Black compost
  • Foul odor
  • Organic acid formation

 

  1. Increased Competitor Molds

Improper ammonia management may encourage:

  • Aspergillus
  • Rhizopus
  • Other thermotolerant molds

especially when Phase-II conditioning is inadequate.

 

Role of Ammonia During Different Composting Phases

Phase Ammonia Requirement
Initial wetting Moderate
Phase-I composting High
Peak heating High
Phase-II pasteurization Decreasing
Conditioning Removal required
Spawning Nearly zero

 

Ideal Ammonia Levels

Stage NH₃ Concentration
Day 3–7 Phase-I Very High
End of Phase-I 0.5–1.5%
Conditioning Phase-II Gradually reduced
At spawning <0.05%

 

Practical Observation in Indian Mushroom Farms

A major issue now being observed in India is the declining nitrogen content of chicken manure during extreme summers. Poultry feed often contains reduced protein levels to lower heat stress in birds, resulting in manure with lower nitrogen content.

Consequences:

  • Lower ammonia generation during Phase-I
  • Slower compost heating
  • Poor straw degradation
  • Reduced microbial biomass
  • Lower compost quality
  • Reduced mushroom yield

Many farms compensate by carefully adjusting:

  • Chicken manure levels
  • Urea supplementation
  • Ammonium sulfate supplementation
  • Compost turning schedules

 

Conclusion

Ammonia is both a friend and a foe in mushroom composting.

Friend: It drives microbial activity, generates heat, breaks down straw, and creates selective compost.

Foe: If not removed during Phase-II conditioning, it becomes toxic to mushroom mycelium, causes nitrogen losses, and reduces yield.

The key principle is:

“High ammonia during Phase-I, zero ammonia at spawning.”

This balance is one of the most critical factors determining the productivity of white button mushroom compost.