Register      Login
Animal Production Science Animal Production Science Society
Food, fibre and pharmaceuticals from animals

Just Accepted

This article has been peer reviewed and accepted for publication. It is in production and has not been edited, so may differ from the final published form.

Analyzing the effects of feeding Black Soldier Fly on broiler growth performance: A Meta-analysis

Zafar Hayat 0000-0002-0975-1594, Tuba Riaz 0000-0002-8559-6346, Youssef Attia, Faran Hameed, Fahad Siddiqui

Abstract

Context The black soldier fly has been found to be a rich protein source, containing high amounts of protein and lipids, making them a valuable and sustainable alternative to conventional protein sources such as fish and soybean meals for broilers, which has also been demonstrated by multiple studies. Aims A meta-analysis was conducted using peer-reviewed published research on the use of black soldier flies in poultry diets to test the hypothesis that it enhances growth performance as a sustainable alternative to plant-based protein sources. Methods Toward this end, we used publicly available databases (Google Scholar, PubMed, Science Direct, Embase) to identify peer-reviewed papers. Retrieved articles were screened for relevance and quality using established criteria. The studies were largely rejected due to non-reporting of variance measures or reporting pooled measures of variance that could not be used As a result, eight studies were used to extract data for growth performance, including body weight gain. Key results The meta-analysis showed that the effect of feeding black soldier fly meals on body weight gain was non-significant. However, the sub-group analysis depicted that utilization of the frozen form of the black soldier fly lowers body weight gain compared to the birds fed basal diets. Furthermore, the feed intake was significantly (p < 0.05) reduced when the broilers were fed with diets containing black soldier fly meals. The feed conversion ratio showed non-significant (p > 0.05) differences with the supplementation. Conclusions The inclusion level of black soldier fly larvae meal in any form was seen to be safe up to 10% as well as the effective duration of the supplementation was less than or equal to 35 days. Implications Moreover, the utilization of black soldier fly as a sustainable protein source should be encouraged to facilitate farmers in terms of being less dependent on soybean meal as well as to reduce the competition between humans and animals for plant protein sources.

AN24106  Accepted 17 September 2024

© CSIRO 2024

Committee on Publication Ethics