Department of Entomology, Texas A&M University, United States; EVO Conversion Systems, LLC, United States.
Food and Feed Safety Research Unit, Southern Plains Agricultural Research Center, Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture, United States.
Environ Pollut. 2021 Aug 1;282:116976. doi: 10.1016/j.envpol.2021.116976. Epub 2021 Mar 26.
The industrial production of insects for waste management or as a protein source is becoming vital to our society. Large volumes of manure are produced by concentrated animal facilities around the globe that must be managed, utilized, and disposed of properly. Flies offer a partial solution with their abilities to reduce these wastes and heavy metal pollutants. Meat and crop proteins are being supplemented by insect proteins for many feeds across the globe, yet science-based studies behind the mass-rearing of insects are still in their infancy. In the current study, the percent change in the composition of nutrients, heavy metals, and fiber, in dairy, poultry, and swine manure degraded by either black soldier fly (BSF) or house fly (HF) larvae was explored. Pre-digested and post-digested manure samples were collected from four independent studies that differed in production scale (number of larvae and feeding regimen): 1) BSF small-scale (100 larvae fed incrementally), 2) HF small-scale (100 larvae fed incrementally), 3) BSF large-scale (10,000 larvae fed a single time), and 4) HF large-scale (4,000 larvae fed a single time). Results indicate that nitrogen is a key nutrient impacted by larval digestion of manure by both species, regardless of scale. However, scale significantly impacted reductions of other nutrients, as did the type of manure in which the insects were reared. Ultimately, this study demonstrated that manure type and rearing scale impact the ability of BSF and HF larvae to reduce nutrients and heavy metals in manure, and thus insect management procedures need to be congruent with production emphases of the insects for waste management or protein products. Failure to take scale into consideration could lead to inaccurate assumptions related to industrialized efforts on this topic.
昆虫的工业化生产在废物管理或作为蛋白质来源方面对我们的社会变得至关重要。全球集中的动物养殖场会产生大量的粪便,这些粪便必须得到妥善的管理、利用和处理。蝇类通过减少这些废物和重金属污染物的能力提供了部分解决方案。在全球范围内,许多饲料都在补充昆虫蛋白作为肉类和作物蛋白的替代品,但昆虫大规模养殖的科学研究仍处于起步阶段。在当前的研究中,探索了黑蝇(BSF)或家蝇(HF)幼虫降解奶牛、家禽和猪粪时营养成分、重金属和纤维的组成百分比变化。从四个不同规模(幼虫数量和喂养方案)的独立研究中收集了预消化和后消化的粪便样本:1)BSF 小规模(100 只幼虫逐渐喂养),2)HF 小规模(100 只幼虫逐渐喂养),3)BSF 大规模(10,000 只幼虫一次性喂养),4)HF 大规模(4,000 只幼虫一次性喂养)。结果表明,氮是两种昆虫幼虫消化粪便时受影响的关键营养物质,而不管规模如何。然而,规模显著影响了其他营养物质的减少,昆虫饲养的粪便类型也是如此。最终,这项研究表明,粪便类型和饲养规模影响 BSF 和 HF 幼虫在粪便中减少营养物质和重金属的能力,因此昆虫管理程序需要与昆虫在废物管理或蛋白质产品方面的生产重点一致。如果不考虑规模,可能会导致与该主题的工业化努力相关的不准确假设。