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Biological Treatment of Municipal Organic Waste using Black Soldier Fly Larvae

545

Citations

18

References

2011

Year

TLDR

Municipal organic waste can be valorised by black soldier fly larvae, which reduce waste and produce prepupae that serve as valuable animal‑feed additives, offering economic opportunities in low‑ and middle‑income countries. The study evaluated the feasibility of black soldier fly larvae to digest mixed municipal organic waste in a medium‑scale field experiment in Costa Rica, examining its benefits and limitations. The experiment involved feeding mixed municipal organic waste to larvae in Costa Rica, monitoring prepupae production, waste reduction, and factors affecting larval yield. The experiment produced an average of 252 g m⁻² day⁻¹ of prepupae and reduced waste by 65.5–78.9 %, but high zinc concentrations, anaerobic conditions, and liquid stagnation limited larval yield, highlighting the need for further research on larval requirements and process design.

Abstract

Valorisation of municipal organic waste through larval feeding activity of the black soldier fly, Hermetia illucens, constitutes a potential benefit, especially for low and middle-income countries. Besides waste reduction and stabilisation, the product in form of the last larval stage, the so-called prepupae, offers a valuable additive in animal feed, opening new economic niches for small entrepreneurs in developing countries. We have therefore evaluated the feasibility of the black soldier fly larvae to digest and degrade mixed municipal organic waste in a medium-scale field experiment in Costa Rica, and explored the benefits and limitations of this technology. We achieved an average prepupae production of 252 g/m2/day (wet weight) under favourable conditions. Waste reduction ranged from 65.5 to 78.9% depending on the daily amount of waste added to the experimental unit and presence/absence of a drainage system. Three factors strongly influenced larval yield and waste reduction capacity: (1) high larval mortality due to elevated zinc concentrations in the waste material and anaerobic conditions in the experimental trays; (2) lack of fertile eggs due to zinc poisoning, and (3) limited access to food from stagnating liquid in the experimental trays. This study confirmed the great potential of this fly as a waste manager in low and middle-income countries, but also identified knowledge gaps pertaining to biological larvae requirements (egg hatching rate, moisture tolerance, …) and process design (drainage, rearing facilities, …) to be tackled in future research.

References

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