Abstract

Simple SummaryThe black soldier fly Hermetia illucens is a widespread species of fly of American origins, which is increasingly used to develop sustainable waste recycling processes as it is able to develop by consuming a wide variety of wastes as food, while both its body and the residuals of its feeding activity can be re-used in a variety of processes. However, many aspects of its larval biology remain unknown. Among these, there is larval movement and its variation in response to external stimuli and environmental conditions. Larvae of the black soldier fly eventually reach the prepupal stage, during which they stop feeding and seek a shelter to pupate. Sorting prepupae from the younger larvae and feeding substratum can be important in rearing processes, since they are used to obtain adults but are also particularly rich in protein and lipids. We focused our study on behavioural differences between prepupae and younger larvae, describing tonic immobility as an anti-predatory response of both, but also their very different ways of locomotion and reactions to stress. Finally, we developed a practical system to exploit these differences, inducing prepupae to move away from the substratum and other larvae to be efficiently collected.The neotropical insect Hermetia illucens has become a cosmopolite species, and it is considered a highly promising insect in circular and sustainable economic processes. Being able to feed on a wide variety of organic substrates, it represents a source of lipids and proteins for many uses and produces recyclable waste. We investigated the characteristics and differences in the poorly-known locomotory behaviour of larvae of different instars, paying particular attention to the unique characteristics of the prepupal stage, key to farming and industrial processes. Moreover, we attempted to develop a “self-harvesting” system relying on the behavioural traits of prepupae to obtain their separation from younger larvae under rearing condition with minimum effort. Prepupae differ from younger larvae in their response to physical disturbance in the form of tonic immobility and significantly differ in their locomotory movements. Both prepupae and younger larvae reacted similarly to heat or light-induced stress, but low light and high moisture induced only prepupae to migrate away, which resulted in the development of a highly efficient separation methodology. The new data on the behaviour of H. illucens not only shed new light on some unexplored aspects of its biology, but also led to develop an inexpensive self-harvesting system that can be implemented in small-scale and industrial farming.

Highlights

  • The black soldier fly Hermetia illucens (Diptera: Stratiomyidae) is native to the Americas, but today has a cosmopolite distribution due to human activities [1,2,3,4,5]

  • We investigated larval locomotion in H. illucens, documenting the behavioral responses of the apod larvae belonging to different instars to both mechanical disturbance, and stress caused by different light or heat conditions

  • Our data suggest that tonic immobility, hitherto undescribed in H. illucens, to be a standardized response to physical contact in prepupae, while being extremely rare on the younger larvae

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Summary

Introduction

The black soldier fly Hermetia illucens (Diptera: Stratiomyidae) is native to the Americas, but today has a cosmopolite distribution due to human activities [1,2,3,4,5]. It is considered highly promising to the development of sustainable waste management strategies due to its ability to efficiently consume an extraordinary variety of organic food sources including agro-industrial by-products, e.g., [9,10,11]. In addition to this capacity, H. illucens is usable as a protein and lipids-rich feed and food [12,13,14,15] and in the production of bioplastics [16,17,18]. The larvae processing residues may be utilized in other processes, for instance partly replacing commercial peat in the production of potted plants [21] or as a soil amendment for agricultural production as in the case of byproducts of other biomass processing [22,23]

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