Effects of brewery by-products on growth performance, bioconversion efficiency, nutritional profile, and microbiota and mycobiota of black soldier fly larvae

IF 4 2区 农林科学 Q1 AGRICULTURE, DAIRY & ANIMAL SCIENCE Animal Pub Date : 2024-09-01 DOI:10.1016/j.animal.2024.101288
A. Resconi, S. Bellezza Oddon, I. Ferrocino, Z. Loiotine, C. Caimi, L. Gasco , I. Biasato
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Abstract

Brewery by-products are recognised as suitable rearing substrates for Hermetia illucens, better known as black soldier fly (BSF) but information about the impact of different ratios of brewer’s spent grains (BSG) and brewer’s spent yeast (BSY) are still scarce. This study evaluated the effects of BSG-BSY-based diets on BSF larval growth, survival, bioconversion efficiency, nutritional profile, and microbiota and mycobiota. A total of 3 000 6-day-old BSF larvae were allotted to five dietary treatments (six replicate boxes/diet, 100 larvae/box): (i) BSY2.5 (25 g/kg of BSY+975 g/kg of BSG), (ii) BSY5 (50 g/kg of BSY+950 g/kg of BSG), (iii) BSY7.5 (75 g/kg of BSY+925 g/kg of BSG), (iv) BSY10 (100 g/kg of BSY+900 g/kg of BSG), and (v) control (Gainesville diet). Larval weight and substrate pH were recorded every 4 days. At the end of the trial (5% of prepupae), bioconversion efficiency corrected for residue (BER), reduction rate (RR), and waste reduction index (WRI) were calculated, and the larval proximate composition, microbiota and mycobiota characterised. At 10 and 14 days of age, BSY7.5 and BSY10 larvae displayed higher weight than BSY2.5 and BSY5 (P < 0.05), with BSY10 larvae showing the highest weight among the BSG-BSY-based diets at the end of the trial (P < 0.05). The BSY7.5 and BSY10 larvae also displayed a better BER than BSY2.5 and BSY5 (P < 0.01), whereas similar RR, WRI, survival and development time, as well as pH, were, however, observed among the BSG-BSY-based diets (P > 0.05). The BSY10 larvae displayed lower ether extract content than the other BSG-BSY-based diets (P > 0.001). The use of BSG-BSY-based diets did not influence the alpha diversity of larval microbiota and mycobiota (P > 0.05), but a specific microbial signature was identified per each dietary treatment (Porphyromonadaceae [BSY5], Sphingomonas [BSY7.5], Bacillus [BSY10] and Ruminococcus and Myroides [BSG-BSY-based diets]; P < 0.05). Co-occurrence and co-exclusion analysis also showed that Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Pichia excluded and favoured, respectively, the presence of Streptomyces and Fluviicola, while Clavispora lusitaniae was associated with Myroides (P < 0.05). In conclusion, BSG-BSY-based diets are suitable for rearing HI in terms of larval performance, nutritional profile, and microbiota and mycobiota, with 7.5 and 10% of BSY inclusion levels being able to improve larval growth and bioconversion efficiency.

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酿酒厂副产品对黑兵蝇幼虫生长性能、生物转化效率、营养状况以及微生物群和真菌生物群的影响
酿酒厂副产品被认为是黑斑潜蝇(Hermetia illucens)(又称黑兵蝇(BSF))的合适饲养基质,但有关酿酒乏谷(BSG)和酿酒乏酵母(BSY)的不同比例对其影响的信息仍然很少。本研究评估了以 BSG-BSY 为基础的日粮对 BSF 幼虫生长、存活、生物转化效率、营养状况以及微生物群和霉菌群的影响。总共 3 000 只 6 天大的 BSF 幼虫被分配到五个日粮处理中(六个重复箱/日粮,100 只幼虫/箱):(i) BSY2.5(25 克/千克 BSY+975 克/千克 BSG),(ii) BSY5(50 克/千克 BSY+950 克/千克 BSG),(iii) BSY7.5(75 克/千克 BSY+925 克/千克 BSG),(iv) BSY10(100 克/千克 BSY+900 克/千克 BSG),以及 (v) 对照组(盖恩斯维尔饮食)。每 4 天记录一次幼虫体重和底质 pH 值。试验结束时(5% 的幼虫),计算经残留物校正的生物转换效率(BER)、还原率(RR)和废物还原指数(WRI),并描述幼虫的近似物组成、微生物群和霉菌群的特征。在 10 和 14 日龄时,BSY7.5 和 BSY10 幼虫的体重高于 BSY2.5 和 BSY5(P < 0.05),在试验结束时,BSY10 幼虫的体重在以 BSG-BSY 为基础的日粮中最高(P < 0.05)。BSY7.5 和 BSY10 幼虫的 BER 也优于 BSY2.5 和 BSY5(P <0.01),而以 BSG-BSY 为基础的日粮的 RR、WRI、存活率和发育时间以及 pH 值相似(P >0.05)。BSY10 幼虫的乙醚提取物含量低于其他以 BSG-BSY 为基础的日粮(P > 0.001)。使用以 BSG-BSY 为基础的日粮不会影响幼虫微生物群和真菌生物群的阿尔法多样性(P > 0.05),但每种日粮处理都确定了特定的微生物特征(卟啉单胞菌 [BSY5]、鞘氨单胞菌 [BSY7.5]、芽孢杆菌 [BSY10] 以及瘤球菌和霉菌 [以 BSG-BSY 为基础的日粮];P < 0.05)。共发生和共排除分析还表明,酿酒酵母和 Pichia 分别排除和有利于链霉菌和 Fluviicola 的存在,而 Clavispora lusitaniae 与 Myroides 相关(P <;0.05)。总之,基于 BSG-BSY 的日粮在幼虫表现、营养成分、微生物群和真菌生物群方面都适合饲养 HI,其中 7.5%和 10%的 BSY 添加水平能够改善幼虫生长和生物转化效率。
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来源期刊
Animal
Animal 农林科学-奶制品与动物科学
CiteScore
7.50
自引率
2.80%
发文量
246
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Editorial board animal attracts the best research in animal biology and animal systems from across the spectrum of the agricultural, biomedical, and environmental sciences. It is the central element in an exciting collaboration between the British Society of Animal Science (BSAS), Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA) and the European Federation of Animal Science (EAAP) and represents a merging of three scientific journals: Animal Science; Animal Research; Reproduction, Nutrition, Development. animal publishes original cutting-edge research, ''hot'' topics and horizon-scanning reviews on animal-related aspects of the life sciences at the molecular, cellular, organ, whole animal and production system levels. The main subject areas include: breeding and genetics; nutrition; physiology and functional biology of systems; behaviour, health and welfare; farming systems, environmental impact and climate change; product quality, human health and well-being. Animal models and papers dealing with the integration of research between these topics and their impact on the environment and people are particularly welcome.
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