Potential protein and biodiesel sources from black soldier fly larvae : insights of larval harvesting instar and fermented feeding medium

Primarily produced via transesterification of lipid sources, fatty acid methyl ester (FAME) of biodiesel derived from insect larvae has gained momentum in a great deal of research done over other types of feedstock. From the self-harvesting nature of black soldier fly larvae (BSFL), research had, ho...

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Main Authors: Wong, Chung Yiin, Siti Suhailah, Rosli, Uemura, Yoshimitsu, Ho, Yeek Chia, Leejeerajumnean, Arunsri, Kiatkittipong, Worapon, Cheng, C. K., Lam, Man Kee, Lim, Jun Wei
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019
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Online Access:http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/25575/1/Potential%20protein%20and%20biodiesel%20sources%20from%20black%20soldier%20.pdf
http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/25575/
https://doi.org/10.3390/en12081570
https://doi.org/10.3390/en12081570
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spelling my.ump.umpir.255752019-11-20T07:45:37Z http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/25575/ Potential protein and biodiesel sources from black soldier fly larvae : insights of larval harvesting instar and fermented feeding medium Wong, Chung Yiin Siti Suhailah, Rosli Uemura, Yoshimitsu Ho, Yeek Chia Leejeerajumnean, Arunsri Kiatkittipong, Worapon Cheng, C. K. Lam, Man Kee Lim, Jun Wei TP Chemical technology Primarily produced via transesterification of lipid sources, fatty acid methyl ester (FAME) of biodiesel derived from insect larvae has gained momentum in a great deal of research done over other types of feedstock. From the self-harvesting nature of black soldier fly larvae (BSFL), research had, however, only concentrated on the harvest of BSFL on sixth instar. Through rearing BSFL on coconut endosperm waste (CEW), 100 BSFL were harvested at the fifth and sixth instar, then modification on CEW with mixed-bacteria powder was carried out. It was found that the fifth instar BSFL had 34% lipid content, which was 8% more than the sixth instar. Both instars had similar corrected protein contents around 35–38%. The sixth instar BSFL contained around 19% of chitin, which was about 11% more than the fifth instar. Biodiesel products from both instars showed no differences in terms of FAME content. With modification on CEW, at 0.5 wt% of mixed-bacteria powder concentration, the maximum waste-to-biomass conversion (WBC) and protein conversion (PC) were achieved at 9% and 60%, respectively. Moreover, even with the shorter fermentation time frame of CEW, it did not affect the development of BSFL in terms of its WBC and PC when fed with 14 and 21 days fermented medium. FAME from all groups set, which predominantly constituted about C12:0 at around 60%, followed by C14:0 at around 15%, C16:0, and C18:1 both at 10% on average. Lastly, the FAME yield from BSFL was improved from 25% (sixth instar) to 33% (fifth instar) and showed its highest at 38.5% with modification on raw CEW with 0.5 wt% mixed-bacteria powder and fermented for 21 days. Thus, harvesting BSFL at earlier instar is more beneficial and practical, as it improves the FAME yield from the BSFL biomass. MDPI AG 2019-04-25 Article PeerReviewed pdf en cc_by_4 http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/25575/1/Potential%20protein%20and%20biodiesel%20sources%20from%20black%20soldier%20.pdf Wong, Chung Yiin and Siti Suhailah, Rosli and Uemura, Yoshimitsu and Ho, Yeek Chia and Leejeerajumnean, Arunsri and Kiatkittipong, Worapon and Cheng, C. K. and Lam, Man Kee and Lim, Jun Wei (2019) Potential protein and biodiesel sources from black soldier fly larvae : insights of larval harvesting instar and fermented feeding medium. Energies, 12 (8). pp. 1-15. ISSN 1996-1073 https://doi.org/10.3390/en12081570 https://doi.org/10.3390/en12081570
institution Universiti Malaysia Pahang
building UMP Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaysia Pahang
content_source UMP Institutional Repository
url_provider http://umpir.ump.edu.my/
language English
topic TP Chemical technology
spellingShingle TP Chemical technology
Wong, Chung Yiin
Siti Suhailah, Rosli
Uemura, Yoshimitsu
Ho, Yeek Chia
Leejeerajumnean, Arunsri
Kiatkittipong, Worapon
Cheng, C. K.
Lam, Man Kee
Lim, Jun Wei
Potential protein and biodiesel sources from black soldier fly larvae : insights of larval harvesting instar and fermented feeding medium
description Primarily produced via transesterification of lipid sources, fatty acid methyl ester (FAME) of biodiesel derived from insect larvae has gained momentum in a great deal of research done over other types of feedstock. From the self-harvesting nature of black soldier fly larvae (BSFL), research had, however, only concentrated on the harvest of BSFL on sixth instar. Through rearing BSFL on coconut endosperm waste (CEW), 100 BSFL were harvested at the fifth and sixth instar, then modification on CEW with mixed-bacteria powder was carried out. It was found that the fifth instar BSFL had 34% lipid content, which was 8% more than the sixth instar. Both instars had similar corrected protein contents around 35–38%. The sixth instar BSFL contained around 19% of chitin, which was about 11% more than the fifth instar. Biodiesel products from both instars showed no differences in terms of FAME content. With modification on CEW, at 0.5 wt% of mixed-bacteria powder concentration, the maximum waste-to-biomass conversion (WBC) and protein conversion (PC) were achieved at 9% and 60%, respectively. Moreover, even with the shorter fermentation time frame of CEW, it did not affect the development of BSFL in terms of its WBC and PC when fed with 14 and 21 days fermented medium. FAME from all groups set, which predominantly constituted about C12:0 at around 60%, followed by C14:0 at around 15%, C16:0, and C18:1 both at 10% on average. Lastly, the FAME yield from BSFL was improved from 25% (sixth instar) to 33% (fifth instar) and showed its highest at 38.5% with modification on raw CEW with 0.5 wt% mixed-bacteria powder and fermented for 21 days. Thus, harvesting BSFL at earlier instar is more beneficial and practical, as it improves the FAME yield from the BSFL biomass.
format Article
author Wong, Chung Yiin
Siti Suhailah, Rosli
Uemura, Yoshimitsu
Ho, Yeek Chia
Leejeerajumnean, Arunsri
Kiatkittipong, Worapon
Cheng, C. K.
Lam, Man Kee
Lim, Jun Wei
author_facet Wong, Chung Yiin
Siti Suhailah, Rosli
Uemura, Yoshimitsu
Ho, Yeek Chia
Leejeerajumnean, Arunsri
Kiatkittipong, Worapon
Cheng, C. K.
Lam, Man Kee
Lim, Jun Wei
author_sort Wong, Chung Yiin
title Potential protein and biodiesel sources from black soldier fly larvae : insights of larval harvesting instar and fermented feeding medium
title_short Potential protein and biodiesel sources from black soldier fly larvae : insights of larval harvesting instar and fermented feeding medium
title_full Potential protein and biodiesel sources from black soldier fly larvae : insights of larval harvesting instar and fermented feeding medium
title_fullStr Potential protein and biodiesel sources from black soldier fly larvae : insights of larval harvesting instar and fermented feeding medium
title_full_unstemmed Potential protein and biodiesel sources from black soldier fly larvae : insights of larval harvesting instar and fermented feeding medium
title_sort potential protein and biodiesel sources from black soldier fly larvae : insights of larval harvesting instar and fermented feeding medium
publisher MDPI AG
publishDate 2019
url http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/25575/1/Potential%20protein%20and%20biodiesel%20sources%20from%20black%20soldier%20.pdf
http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/25575/
https://doi.org/10.3390/en12081570
https://doi.org/10.3390/en12081570
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score 13.211869