Abstract

The utilization of the black soldier fly (BSF) Hermetia illucens L. for recycling organic waste into high-quality protein and fat biomass for animal feeds has gained momentum worldwide. However, information on the genetic diversity and environmental implications on safety of the larvae is limited. This study delineates genetic variability and unravels gut microbiome complex of wild-collected and domesticated BSF populations from six continents using mitochondrial COI gene and 16S metagenomics. All sequences generated from the study linked to H. illucens accessions KM967419.1, FJ794355.1, FJ794361.1, FJ794367.1, KC192965.1, and KY817115.1 from GenBank. Phylogenetic analyses of the sequences generated from the study and rooted by GenBank accessions of Hermetia albitarsis Fabricius and Hermetia sexmaculata Macquart separated all samples into three branches, with H. illucens and H. sexmaculata being closely related. Genetic distances between H. illucens samples from the study and GenBank accessions of H. illucens ranged between 0.0091 and 0.0407 while H. sexmaculata and H. albitarsis samples clearly separated from all H. illucens by distances of 0.1745 and 0.1903, respectively. Genetic distance matrix was used to generate a principal coordinate plot that further confirmed the phylogenetic clustering. Haplotype network map demonstrated that Australia, United States 1 (Rhode Island), United States 2 (Colorado), Kenya, and China shared a haplotype, while Uganda shared a haplotype with GenBank accession KC192965 BSF from United States. All other samples analyzed had individual haplotypes. Out of 481,695 reads analyzed from 16S metagenomics, four bacterial families (Enterobactereaceae, Dysgonomonadaceae, Wohlfahrtiimonadaceae, and Enterococcaceae) were most abundant in the BSF samples. Alpha-diversity, as assessed by Shannon index, showed that the Kenyan and Thailand populations had the highest and lowest microbe diversity, respectively; while microbial diversity assessed through Bray Curtis distance showed United States 3 (Maysville) and Netherlands populations to be the most dissimilar. Our findings on genetic diversity revealed slight phylogeographic variation between BSF populations across the globe. The 16S data depicted larval gut bacterial families with economically important genera that might pose health risks to both animals and humans. This study recommends pre-treatment of feedstocks and postharvest measures of the harvested BSF larvae to minimize risk of pathogen contamination along the insect-based feed value chain.

Highlights

  • The black soldier fly (BSF) Hermetia illucens (Linnaeus, 1758; Diptera: Stratiomiydae) is a highly adaptable saprophagous cosmopolitan insect species (Carles-Tolra and Andersen, 2002)

  • It is believed that BSF has a common ancestry, and the phylogenetic analysis has shown very limited variation between the different populations based on mitochondrial COI barcode region

  • Several studies have shown that other gene regions like Cytochrome b (CytB) gene (Chen et al, 2019) and NADH dehydrogenase 4 (ND4) gene (Tang et al, 1995) may be more polymorphic and give better resolution of intraspecific divergence of certain arthropod species

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Summary

Introduction

The black soldier fly (BSF) Hermetia illucens (Linnaeus, 1758; Diptera: Stratiomiydae) is a highly adaptable saprophagous cosmopolitan insect species (Carles-Tolra and Andersen, 2002). Global records of H. illucens indicate an increased frequency of encounters in Europe from 1950–1960, this is not a true indication of their abundance. It was first recorded in southern Europe in 1926. H. illucens was recorded in the Southeastern United States as far back as the 1800s (Marshall et al, 2015), reflecting a northward spread from a native range in Central America and the northern parts of South America in historical times. Molecular evidence supporting the biogeography of H. illucens and its colonization of Africa and the world at large is lacking

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