Abstract

Organic waste is a rapidly increasing problem due to the growth of the agricultural production needed to meet global food demands. Development of sustainable waste management solutions is essential. Black soldier fly, Hermetia illucens (L.) (Diptera: Stratiomyidae) (BSF), larvae are voracious consumers of a wide range of organic materials ranging from fruits and vegetables to animal remains, and manure. Thanks to this ability and considering the larval high protein and lipid content, BSF larvae are a useful additive in animal feeds and biodiesel production. Unfortunately, the feasibility of using the black soldier fly as a tool for waste valorization and feed production has primarily been investigated at the benchtop scale. Thus, mobilization of current practices to an industrial scale is challenging because scaling up from small laboratory studies to large industrial studies is not necessarily linear. The goal of this study was to demonstrate the ability of the BSF to recycle organic waste at an industrial scale. To accomplish this goal, three organic waste streams were used (e.g., apples, bananas, and spent grain from a brewery) to test six diet treatments (1) apple, (2) banana, (3) spent grain, (4) apple and banana, (5) apple and spent grain, and (6) banana and spent grain. Working at scale of 10,000 BSF larvae life history traits, waste valorization, protein and lipid profiles were measured for each diet treatment. Differences were recorded across all variables, except substrate conversion, for larvae fed on fruit and spent grain (alone or with fruit). Growth rate significantly differed across treatments; larvae reared on spent grain grew twice as fast as those fed apples alone, but those reared on the apple and spent grain mixture produced twice as much insect biomass. However, it should be noted that larvae resulting from the apple diet contained 50% more fat than larvae fed the fruit and spent grain mixtures. Commonly-available organic wastes were successfully used at an industrial scale to produce BSF larvae that have the potential to substitute other sources of protein and lipids in different industrial applications. Industrialization efforts are encouraged to assess these impacts when integrating diverse ingredients into larval diets as a means to more precisely predict output, such as larval development time and final larval biomass.

Highlights

  • Organic waste is a rapidly increasing problem due to the growth of the agricultural production needed to meet global food demands

  • We fed black soldier fly (BSF) larvae on six types of agricultural by-products: Apple (A); Banana (B); Spent Grain from a local brewery (SG); Apple and Banana (AB) mixed in 1:1 ratio (w/w—weight per weight); Apple and Spent Grain (ASG) mixed in 1:1 ratio (w/w); Banana and Spent Grain (BSG) mixed in 1:1 ratio (w/w) and we examined larval development, growth, final biomass, protein and lipid content, and substrate reduction on an industrial scale

  • BSF larval development on the experimental diets was compared from day 5 to day

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Summary

Introduction

Organic waste is a rapidly increasing problem due to the growth of the agricultural production needed to meet global food demands. Hermetia illucens (L.) (Diptera: Stratiomyidae) (BSF), larvae are voracious consumers of a wide range of organic materials ranging from fruits and vegetables to animal remains, and manure. Thanks to this ability and considering the larval high protein and lipid content, BSF larvae are a useful additive in animal feeds and biodiesel production. The ability of saprophagous macroinvertebrates to convert a wide range of decomposing organic substrates, such as vegetable matter, animal manure, and other organic refuse, could provide a sustainable method for waste recycling, while at the same time producing valuable secondary products such as animal feed, compost, and biofuels

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