4.5 Article

Insects in Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) diets - comparison between full-fat, defatted, and de-chitinised meals, and oil and exoskeleton fractions

Journal

JOURNAL OF INSECTS AS FOOD AND FEED
Volume 8, Issue 11, Pages 1235-1247

Publisher

WAGENINGEN ACADEMIC PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.3920/JIFF2021.0094

Keywords

black soldier fly larvae; insect fractions; pellet quality; fish growth performance; nutrient utilisation

Funding

  1. SureAqua Nordic Center of Excellence [82342]
  2. Research Council of Norway (RCN), BioTek 2021/Havbruk Biofeed [229003]

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In the study, full-fat and de-chitinised black soldier fly larvae meals negatively impacted the physical quality of feed pellets for Atlantic salmon. However, these meals improved the growth rate of salmon. The defatted meal, oil, and exoskeleton supported similar growth performance as the control.
The present study investigated the effect of meals and fractions of black soldier fly larvae ( BSFL; Hermetia illucens) in diets for Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) on the physical quality of feed pellets, nutrient utilisation, and growth performance. Six extruded diets were produced: control diet (CD); full-fat BSFL meal diet (IM); defatted BSFL meal diet (DFIM); de-chitinised BSFL meal diet (DCIM); BSFL oil diet (IO) and BSFL exoskeleton diet (EX). The full-fat, defatted and de-chitinised meals replaced 15% of protein in the control diet. An eight-week study was conducted using salmon with average 28 g initial weight. The full- fat and de-chitinised meals in the diets numerically reduced pellet hardness, expansion, and water stability. The full-fat and de-chitinised meals improved growth rate of salmon, whilst defatted meal, oil and exoskeleton supported similar growth performance as the control. Feed intake and growth rate of fish fed full-fat meal diet were higher than those fed the other insect diets, but defatted meal gave a better feed conversion ratio than full-fat meal. Defatted meal, de-chitinised meal and exoskeleton reduced protein digestibility in fish, however; defatted meal increased the digested protein retention. In conclusion, use of full-fat BSFL meal improved feed intake and growth rate of salmon when replacing 15% of dietary protein. The present results suggest that less processed fullfat form of BSFL is more optimal in diets for salmon and further processing to remove lipid or exoskeleton fractions would only lead to an additional cost.

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