
Teenagers Nigerians Encourage Expansion in Mushroom Culture
A new generation of agricultural innovation is being incubated in Nigeria, where young farmers are considering mushroom farming – a business with high growth rates, health value, and strong profit potential.
This BMA featured video report, shot in Abuja – Nigeria, shows farmers carefully plucking white mushrooms, weighing them, and packing them into bags for sale.
The video also examines the production process from the beginning, where farmers combine substrate bags and pile them in incubation cabinets to encourage new growth.
Describing the business, farmer Justice Peter Jegede had described mushroom farming as a new but profitable sector in farming. Plant biologist Alaya Hammed added further that the mushrooms have a fast growth rate and high nutrient levels. With local production levels low in the face of growing demand, the cultivation of mushrooms is becoming an extremely profitable venture around Nigeria.
View the full video report below;
[Video Courtesy: Viory]
[This current affairs report item is provided as part of Broadcast Media Africa (BMA)’s mandate to keep Africa’s broadcast media audiences and stakeholders informed on international developments in local and global humanitarian and public service broadcasting.]