Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-2lccl Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-27T15:20:02.931Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Grinding as a slaughter method for farmed black soldier fly (Hermetia illucens) larvae: Empirical recommendations to achieve instantaneous killing

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 March 2024

Meghan Barrett*
Affiliation:
Department of Biology, Indiana University Indianapolis, Indianapolis, IN, USA Department of Biology, California State University Dominguez Hills, Carson, CA, USA
Chelsea Miranda
Affiliation:
Department of Biology, Howard Payne University, Brownwood, TX, USA
I Theresse Veloso
Affiliation:
Department of Biology, California State University Dominguez Hills, Carson, CA, USA
Casey Flint
Affiliation:
Department of Entomology, Texas A & M University, College Station, TX, USA
Craig D Perl
Affiliation:
Insect Welfare Research Society, Indianapolis, IN, USA
Austin Martinez
Affiliation:
Department of Biology, California State University Dominguez Hills, Carson, CA, USA
Bob Fischer
Affiliation:
Department of Philosophy, Texas State University, San Marcos, TX, USA
Jeffery K Tomberlin
Affiliation:
Department of Entomology, Texas A & M University, College Station, TX, USA
*
Corresponding author: Meghan Barrett; Email: meghbarr@iu.edu
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

At least 200 billion black soldier fly (Hermetia illucens) larvae (BSFL) are reared each year as food and feed, and the insect farming industry is projected to grow rapidly. Despite interest by consumers, producers, and legislators, no empirical evidence exists to guide producers in practicing humane – or instantaneous – slaughter for these novel mini-livestock. BSFL may be slaughtered via freezing, boiling, grinding, or other methods; however standard operating procedures (SOPs) and equipment design may affect the likelihood of instantaneous death using these methods. We tested how larval body size and particle size plate hole diameter affect the likelihood of instantaneous death for black soldier fly larvae that are slaughtered using a standard meat grinder. Larval body size did not affect the likelihood of instantaneous death for larvae that are 106–175 mg in mass. However, particle size plate hole diameter had a significant effect on the likelihood of instantaneous death, with only 54% of larvae experiencing an instant death when using the largest particle size plate (12-mm hole diameter) compared to 84% using the smallest particle size plate (2.55 mm). However, a higher percentage of instantaneous death (up to 99%) could be achieved by reducing the proportion of larvae that become stuck in the machine. We conclude by outlining specific recommendations to support producers in achieving a 99% instantaneous death rate through specific SOPs to be used with similarly designed machines. We also develop a protocol for producers that wish to test their own grinding SOPs.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - ND
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/4.0), which permits re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided that no alterations are made and the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Universities Federation for Animal Welfare

Introduction

The insects as food and feed industry (IAFF) is the single, largest animal livestock farming initiative in human history, already rearing over 1.2 trillion insects a year (Rowe Reference Rowe2020). The IAFF industry has the potential to help achieve sustainable agriculture goals by optimising, and possibly minimising, land and other resources used to obtain animal protein while promoting local circular food systems that turn waste into food, feed, and fuel (van Huis & Tomberlin Reference van Huis and Tomberlin2017; Parodi et al. Reference Parodi, Ipema, Van Zanten, Bolhuis, Van Loon and De Boer2022; Purkayastha & Sarkar Reference Purkayastha and Sarkar2022; van Huis & Gasco Reference van Huis and Gasco2023). These benefits can result in greater economic and food security (van Huis Reference van Huis2013; Chia et al. Reference Chia, Tanga, van Loon and Dicke2019), especially crucial at a time when the global human population is growing (United Nations 2022) and climate change is heightening food insecurity (Makkar Reference Makkar2018).

The IAFF industry is growing rapidly to meet the demand of emerging markets (de Jong & Nikolik Reference de Jong and Nikolik2021; World Wildlife Fund & Tesco 2021); for instance, Makkar et al. (Reference Makkar, Tran, Heuzé and Ankers2014) estimate that up to 100% of fishmeal could safely be replaced with insect protein in aquaculture feed which would result in 160–320 trillion additional insects reared each year (dependent on body mass; Rowe Reference Rowe2020). Insect protein is also suitable for human, vertebrate livestock (chickens, pigs, etc), and pet consumption markets that represent additional insects reared over and above that estimate (de Jong & Nikolik Reference de Jong and Nikolik2021). All this demand means that large facilities are currently being built and planned that could ultimately rear three trillion individual insects or more each, every year (van Huis & Tomberlin Reference van Huis and Tomberlin2017; Innovafeed 2020).

As the industry grows, interest in the welfare of insects as mini-livestock has also emerged from consumers, producers, academics, legislators, and advocacy groups for the industry and animals (de Goede et al. Reference de Goede, Erens, Kapesomenou, Peters, Röcklinsberg and Sandin2013; Bear Reference Bear2019; IPIFF 2019; Lambert et al. Reference Lambert, Elwin and D’Cruze2021; van Huis Reference van Huis2021; Delvendahl et al. Reference Delvendahl, Rumpold and Langen2022; Barrett et al. Reference Barrett, Chia, Fischer and Tomberlin2023a,Reference Barrett, Godfrey, Schnell and Fischerb; DEFRA 2023; Eurogroup for Animals 2023; Klobučar & Fisher Reference Klobučar and Fisher2023; Kortsmit et al. Reference Kortsmit, van der Bruggen, Wertheim, Dicke, Beukeboom and van Loon2023; Voulgari-Kokota et al. Reference Voulgari-Kokota, van Loon and Bovenkerk2023). Sentience is generally considered a precondition for the consideration of welfare (though see Dawkins Reference Dawkins2017) and there is currently no scientific consensus on insect sentience (Adamo Reference Adamo2016, Reference Adamo2019; Barron & Klein Reference Barron and Klein2016; Klein & Barron Reference Klein and Barron2016; Gibbons & Sarlak Reference Gibbons and Sarlak2020; Mikhalevich & Powell Reference Mikhalevich and Powell2020; Lambert et al. Reference Lambert, Elwin and D’Cruze2021; Loon & Bovenkerk Reference Loon and Bovenkerk2021; Overgaard Reference Overgaard2021; Kakrada & Colombo Reference Kakrada and Colombo2022; Elwood Reference Elwood2023; Voulgari-Kokota et al. Reference Voulgari-Kokota, van Loon and Bovenkerk2023; Barrett & Fischer Reference Barrett and Fischer2024).

However, a recent review of neurobiological and behavioural research on insects indicates sentience is plausible (Gibbons et al. Reference Gibbons, Crump, Barrett, Sarlak, Birch and Chittka2022), especially in some orders with farmed insects (e.g. black soldier flies [Hermetia illucens], BSF, in the order Diptera). Importantly, developmental stage may impact the likelihood of sentience in an insect species, especially in the holometabolous insects that undergo a complete metamorphosis (for discussions, see Gibbons et al. Reference Gibbons, Crump, Barrett, Sarlak, Birch and Chittka2022; Barrett & Fischer Reference Barrett and Fischer2023; Fischer & Sandall Reference Fischer and Sandall2023). For instance, Gibbons et al. (Reference Gibbons, Crump, Barrett, Sarlak, Birch and Chittka2022) found that adult dipterans meet six of eight criteria for sentience according to the Birch et al. (Reference Birch, Burn, Schnell, Browning and Crump2021) invertebrate sentience framework while slaughter-age larval dipterans met only four of eight; the remaining two, or four, criteria, respectively, had not yet been assessed for that order at that life stage. While the framework rated adult dipterans as having “strong evidence for sentience”, last instar larval dipterans still fulfilled enough criteria for there to be “substantial evidence for sentience” at this life stage. Therefore, given the scale of the IAFF industry, these data suggest it to be prudent to begin to protect farmed insect welfare from a precautionary perspective, even without complete information on insect sentience at all life stages (Birch Reference Birch2017; Barrett & Fischer Reference Barrett and Fischer2023).

Of particular interest to producers (Bear Reference Bear2019), legislators (UK Government 2015; Council of Animal Affairs 2018), and the media (Sebo & Schukraft Reference Sebo and Schukraft2021; Carlson Reference Carlson2023; Reynolds Reference Reynolds2023) has been the welfare of insects during slaughter. Accordingly, the lack of guidance on best practices for humane slaughter of insects represents a significant risk to the industry’s social licence to operate (Barrett & Adcock Reference Barrett and Adcock2023). This is especially important given that the industry’s most informed and youngest consumers appear to be the most concerned about insect pain in the industry (at least in the US; Fukuda et al. Reference Fukuda, Carrasco, Perez, Fischer and Drewery2023), suggesting that – alongside evidentiary trends (Gibbons et al. Reference Gibbons, Crump, Barrett, Sarlak, Birch and Chittka2022) – social trends are unlikely to make the issue of insect welfare at slaughter less salient to the public over time.

BSF are expected to become the most farmed insect species in the near future. BSF are generally reared in batches and slaughtered as larvae (BSFL). BSFL may be slaughtered using a variety of different methods, including (but not limited to): freezing (in air or liquid nitrogen); baking in a convection oven; roasting in sand or sunshine; microwaving; boiling/blanching; asphyxiation; and grinding/shredding (for a review, see Barrett et al. Reference Barrett, Chia, Fischer and Tomberlin2023a). Humane slaughter may be defined as “when an animal is either killed instantly or rendered insensible until death ensues, without pain, suffering or distress” (Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals [RSPCA] 2023). Clearly, only some of these methods are likely to satisfy this standard. Importantly, the methods and conditions that generate the most humane slaughter process for BSFL may be different than for previously studied species (mostly vertebrates) due to the number of animals to be killed and their unique physiology/morphology (e.g. small bodied, ectothermic, etc). Barrett et al. (Reference Barrett, Chia, Fischer and Tomberlin2023a) suggest boiling/blanching, freezing in liquid nitrogen, and grinding/shredding are the methods most likely to be instantaneous, and thus humane, for BSFL; however, they acknowledge that standard operating procedures (SOPs) are needed to define what practices achieve humane death using each method while remaining practical and economical.

We set out to test if grinding can result in instantaneous (< 1 s), and thus humane, death for BSFL. As larval body size at time of slaughter can vary, we tested two different slaughter-relevant larval body sizes. Producers may also vary the grind consistency of the larval product by changing the hole diameter of the particle size plate on the grinder; therefore, we also tested the effect of particle size plate hole diameter on the likelihood of instantaneous death. From these data, we develop a set of practical recommendations for producers on how to generate grinding SOPs with the greatest likelihood of instantaneous death. Further, given significant variance in machinery design from our own grinder, we provide a protocol for producers interested in testing their own machinery and SOPs for BSFL at four different body sizes.

Materials and methods

Larval rearing

BSF were obtained from a colony that is maintained at the Forensic Laboratory for Investigative Entomological Sciences Facility at Texas A&M University, USA. The colony originated from a colony in Tifton, GA, USA, and the adult colony is maintained and eggs were collected according to methods described by Miranda et al. (Reference Miranda, Cammack and Tomberlin2020). Upon eclosion (i.e. the act of emerging from an egg case), 27 replicates of 0.5 g of newly hatched larvae (approximately 10,000 larvae) were weighed on an OHaus® Adventure™ Pro AV64 balance (OHaus® Corporation, Pine Brook, NJ, USA) and each replicate was placed on 500 g of Gainesville diet (50% wheat bran, 30% alfalfa meal, and 20% corn meal; Hogsette Reference Hogsette1992) saturated with RO (reverse osmosis) water (70%) in 0.5-L deli food storage containers (Amazon.com Inc, Seattle, WA, USA). The newly hatched larvae were allowed to feed for approximately one week and then the contents (i.e. larvae, diet, and frass [i.e. insect waste) of the 0.5-L containers were poured on top of 8 kg of Gainesville diet (70% moisture) placed in the centre of a 30-L Sterilite® ClearView Latch™ storage container (Sterilite®, Townsend, MA, USA), with approximately 800 g of dry diet placed around the perimeter of the wet diet to prevent developing larvae from escaping. To obtain medium size larvae, two of the 0.5-L containers with seven day-old-larvae (DOL) were placed in one pan with 8 kg of diet (approximately 20,000 larvae per pan), while to obtain large larvae, only one container with 7 DOL (10,000 larvae per pan) was placed in each 30-L pan. In total, 18 pans were set up for medium-size larvae and nine pans for large larvae. The larvae were allowed to feed in the pans for one week and then sifted from the diet and frass for use in the experiments described below.

Proportion of instantaneous death due to mechanical separation of the body segments

We assessed the likelihood of instantaneous mortality after receiving a single cut to a particular body segment in the medium- and large-sized larvae (18–19 DOL), as well as 7 and 23–24 DOL. Each larva used was weighed individually to determine body weight and confirm no consistent differences in body size across treatments within a group.

Larva were placed individually on a hot plate kept at 32°C in room temperature air (23.1–24.3°C) and allowed to acclimate for 30 s prior to the beginning of the trial. The use of the hot plate prevented larval bodies from rapidly chilling due to a combination of convective cooling and haemolymph loss; larval bodies were found to drop 1–5°C within 5 s of administering a cut without using the hot plate, which influenced our ability to use movement to assess time-of-death. The hot plate kept larval bodies well above thermal minima so that movement could always be performed and assessed (Addeo et al. Reference Addeo, Li, Rusch, Dickerson, Tarone, Bovera and Tomberlin2022).

For this work, 130 larvae were used from each age/size group, with ten assigned to receive a single dorso-ventral horizontal cut, using a razor blade, in one randomly assigned body segment (S1–S12) and ten control larvae that underwent the same treatment programming but received no cut. One second after receiving the cut, both halves of the larvae were assessed for movement using a poke on the dorsal surface from an MT-29/1HT needle microprobe (Physitemp, Clifton, NJ, USA). Larvae that were ataxic when poked were considered ‘dead’. Movement was assessed to be ‘controlled’ (e.g. locomotion, circular movements of the head or posterior, thrashing, rolling, self-cannibalism, etc; see Supplementary Videos 1–10 included in Barrett et al. Reference Barrett, Miranda, Veloso, Flint, Perl, Martinez, Fischer and Tomberlin2023c) or ‘uncontrolled’ (e.g. a twitch response). Only controlled movements were to be counted as ‘alive’, but no uncontrolled responses were exhibited outside our pilot trials, which occurred at a cooler temperature. The cessation of controlled behaviour is a frequent behavioural endpoint marking death in lethal studies of insects (e.g. Lighton & Turner Reference Lighton and Turner2004; Barrett et al. Reference Barrett, Tigreros, Davidowitz and O’Donnell2023d), though it has not yet been verified metabolically or with electrophysiology in this specific context. Complicating matters, ‘controlled’ behaviour has been observed in the headless portions of decapitated vertebrates (Michel Reference Michel2019). Nevertheless, if precautionary considerations justify attempting to ensure that BSFL are slaughtered humanely, then these same considerations justify treating these behaviours as markers that the animals have not yet died.

In all cases, only one half of the body moved after receiving the cut: for medium-sized larvae, cuts in segments 1–5 indicated the posterior half of the larvae was alive, while cuts in segments 6–12 indicated the anterior half of the larvae was alive; for large-sized larvae, cuts in segments 1–4 indicated the posterior half of the larvae was alive, cuts in segments 5–12 indicated the anterior half of the larvae was alive.

Larvae were assessed for movement for an additional 90 s; if movement ceased, a poke from the probe was used to assess if the larva was alive-but-inactive or had ceased moving altogether and could be presumed dead. If dead, time of death was recorded. At 90 s, larvae were removed from the experimental arena and killed by placing a freezer.

Assessing instantaneous grinding SOPs at scale

To grind the larvae, we used a Univex MG89 Meat Grinder (Salem, NH, USA) with an internal rotating blade immediately anterior to the particle size plate. We tested three different particle size plates with holes 2.55 mm (small), 5.5 mm (medium), or 12 mm (large) in diameter, and two larval body sizes (medium- and large-sized larvae). We determined larval body size by weighing five groups of ten larvae from each batch (two batches of larvae at each size, used for two separate trials) to obtain an average larval weight.

We ran three replicates in each trial for each plate-larval size combination and two trials were performed on two separate days. For each replicate, we turned on the grinder and then poured 500 g of larvae into a funnel, inserted into the hopper of the grinder. We collected the mass of all the ground material that made it through the particle size plate into a plastic container. When larvae stopped passing through the particle size plate we stopped the grinder and collected the mass of all the material stuck behind the particle size plate at the internal rotating blade. We also collected and counted any larvae that were stuck in the tube leading to the blade and noted any obvious injuries (e.g. open wounds or distortion of the body shape from pressure). We noted the time we started and stopped pouring the larvae in the hopper in addition to the time larvae started and stopped coming out of the particle size plate to calculate loading and output rates for each replicate. Between each replicate, we took apart and cleaned the entire machine prior to reassembly.

For each group of larvae (those that passed through the plate and those stuck at the blade), we carefully stirred the material before taking three 8–12 g subsamples from each, placing the subsamples in individual plastic vials filled with 70% EtOH; the remaining sample material was frozen for 24 h to kill any living larvae. We stored subsamples at –4°C until counting to prevent decomposition.

To count each subsample, we drained the EtOH using an ultrafine mesh kitchen strainer and carefully spread out the remaining material onto a paper towel using forceps. Using the data from the trial on the mechanical separation of body segments in individual larva, we counted and recorded the cut location for any larval bodies that were intact enough to be ‘alive’ (see Figure A in Supplementary File 1). This method prevented double counting of bodies, as only one side of a separated larva was counted. When there was an incomplete separation of the larval body, or when separation occurred on a diagonal, we recorded the segment of the wound that reached the farthest across the midline of the animal (as this is closest to the nervous system’s position). We also counted any larvae that were uncut (e.g. whole).

For each replicate, we divided the mass of each group of larvae (those at the blade and that passed through the plate) by the average weight of an individual larva from that batch to determine the number of larvae in each group. We then added these numbers to the number of larvae stuck in the tube to get the total number of larvae in that replicate. We divided the number of larvae in each group by the total number in the replicate to determine the percentage of larvae that got stuck at the blade or passed through the particle plate for each group.

We determined the expected total number of larvae in each subsample by dividing the mass of the subsample by the average mass of a single larva from that batch. We determined the likelihood of instantaneous death for each subsample by multiplying the number of larvae cut in a particular body segment by the proportion of larvae that were immobile 1 s after being cut in that body segment during our individual mechanical separation trials; we then divided this number by the expected total number of larvae in the subsample. We determined the total likelihood of humane death using the proportion of larvae that got stuck at the blade vs made it through the plate and the likelihood of humane death for each of those groups.

Statistical analysis

Data were analysed in GraphPad Prism v 9.5.1 and R v 4.1.3 (R Core Team 2019; GraphPad Software for Windows 2023); normality and homoscedasticity were assessed prior to choosing a particular analysis method. A two-way ANOVA was used to assess the effects of larval body size and particle size plate hole diameter on loading and output rates in grams per second (g s–1) and individuals per second. A mixed-effect model with Sidak’s multiple comparisons test was used to assess if paired larval output rates were slower than loading rates across all treatments; a linear regression was used to determine the relationship between loading and output rates. A one-way ANOVA was used to assess variance in larval weight among treatment groups in the razor-cuts experiment. Alpha was set at P < 0.05.

A beta regression (Cribari-Neto & Zeileis Reference Cribari-Neto and Zeileis2010) was used to analyse the effects of trial and larval size on proportion of instant deaths. Model terms were also assessed with a type II ANOVA (Fox & Weisberg Reference Fox and Weisberg2019). There was no significant interaction between trial and larval size when predicting proportion of humane deaths (χ22,1 < 0.01; P = 0.93) nor was there a significant difference between trials (χ22,1 < 0.1; P = 0.31), indicating there was no trial effect. However, we included trial as a random effect in all models regardless, to control for any unaccountable differences between trials.

Analysis of instant death percentages overall (stuck at the blade and passed through the plate, combined), instant death percentages at the blade only, and instant death percentages passed through the particle plate only, were conducted using generalised linear models with a beta family and logit-link to account for the dependent variable being percentage data (Brooks et al. Reference Brooks, Kristensen, Benthem, Magnusson, Berg, Nielsen, Skaug, Mächler and Bolker2017). Whenever percentage (dead instantly) was estimated to be less than 0%, which occurred sometimes in the ‘stuck at blade’ population due to variance in larval weight, a 0% instant death percentage was substituted. Trial number was fitted as a random intercept. Maximal models with interaction terms were fitted initially followed by step-wise removal of non-significant model terms as determined by log-likelihood tests. Pair-wise post hoc comparisons were conducted using the package ‘emmeans’ (Lenth Reference Lenth2023).

A generalised linear model with a beta family and logit-link were also used to analyse if changes in the likelihood of getting stuck at the blade were based on larval body size or particle size plate hole diameter. Trial was fitted as a random intercept and post hoc pair-wise comparisons were conducted using the package emmeans.

Data, videos, and all supplementary files are available at Barrett et al. (Reference Barrett, Miranda, Veloso, Flint, Perl, Martinez, Fischer and Tomberlin2023c).

Ethical justification

Research on insects is not currently subject to any legally mandated ethical review; therefore, no ethical approval was required to conduct this study. The authors made an effort to consider minimising the number of individuals used (e.g. by selecting only two body mass categories for the at-scale work and running pilot tests to determine the minimum sample size that could be run to attain accurate results of a full grinder). Individuals could not be anaesthetised/stunned prior to receiving cuts (as this would interfere with the behavioural assessment of death) or prior to the slaughter process (as larvae are not stunned on farms and larval activity during slaughter could have effects on survival that we should replicate). However, larvae were frozen following experimentation and sample collection to ensure death occurred rapidly. Notably, there is currently disagreement as to whether freezing provides a humane method of killing for insects, however current best practice guidelines do suggest this method can still be used until further data are acquired to resolve this dispute (Fischer et al. Reference Fischer, Barrett, Adcock, Barron, Browning, Chittka, Drinkwater, Gibbons, Haverkamp and Perl2023). Despite our best efforts to consider and minimise welfare impacts on our research subjects we acknowledge a practice that we believe would improve our methods and further minimise harm to the animals in future studies that seek to replicate our design. Larvae could have been anaesthetised immediately following output from the slaughter machine (or immediately following the completion of the cut assay), preferably using isoflurane. This approach would prevent possible suffering during sample collection and weighing, which occurred while larvae were not anaesthetised in our at-scale study, as well as any possible suffering during the freezing process.

Results

Body-size variation in the proportion of instantaneous death due to mechanical separation of the body segments

There was no statistically significant difference in the masses of larvae across treatments in any age/size group (One-way ANOVAs, 7 DOL: F = 0.67, df = 12; P = 0.78; medium: F = 1.14, df = 12; P = 0.34; large: F = 0.91, df = 12; P = 0.54; 23–24 DOL: F = 0.79, df = 12; P = 0.66); therefore, the masses of each group were calculated from all BSFL used in all treatments (Table 1). There was a degree of overlap in mass range in the medium and large, and large and 23–24 DOL, treatments (Figure S1; Supplementary File 3).

The proportion of BSFL that died instantly, or after 90 s, varied based on larval body size and treatment (e.g. body segment injury location; Figure 1, Tables S1, S2; Supplementary File 3). Smaller larvae were more likely to die across all treatments (Figure 1[b], [d]).

Figure 1. Proportion of larvae of different ages/sizes dead instantly, or by 90 s, due to cuts from a razor blade at different body segments. The proportion of larvae dead by body segment cut location, (a) instantly or (c) by 90 s; and the proportion of larvae dead across all treatments (cuts in S1–S12) (b) instantly or (d) by 90 s by age/size. DOL = day old larvae; BSFL = black soldier fly larvae.

Table 1. Mean mass, and mass ranges, of larvae from each age/size group in g

Across the four age/size categories, 160 BSFL were cut in body segments 9–12 where they could be expected to reach their open body cavity with their mouthparts. In observing their behaviours for 90 s, only one larva ever attempted to self-cannibalise (a 0.09-g ‘medium’ sized larvae), or 0.63% of the tested subjects. Other behavioural responses, exhibited by larvae across age/size categories and treatments, included: unprompted forward and backward locomotion; continuous lateral rolling; waving of the head from side-to-side; contracting the body segments; thrashing; rolling; circling of the head or posterior; as well as any of these movements prompted in response to a poke from the probe after a period of stillness (for examples of these behaviours, see Supplementary Videos 1–10 in Barrett et al. Reference Barrett, Miranda, Veloso, Flint, Perl, Martinez, Fischer and Tomberlin2023c).

Loading and output rates

The loading rate of larvae in g s–1 to the machine did not vary according to body size or particle size plate hole diameter (two-way ANOVA; all P > 0.05; Figure S2; Supplementary File 3). Larvae were loaded at a rate of 39.4 (± 6.5) g s–1 across all conditions. Large-sized larvae were loaded at a rate of 227.0 (± 30.9) estimated individuals per second, while medium-sized larvae were loaded at a rate of 369.7 (± 72.6) estimated individuals per second (Figure 2).

Figure 2. Estimated number of individual black soldier fly larvae (BSFL) processed per second using the grinding technique. Showing (a) estimated number of individual larvae of a large and medium body mass loaded per second into the hopper of the grinder and (b) estimated grinder output rate for large- and medium-sized larvae.

The rate of larval output in g s–1 from the machine also did not vary according to body size or particle size plate hole diameter (two-way ANOVA; all P > 0.05; Figure S2; Supplementary File 3). Larval output rates were 25.22 (± 4.41) g s–1. Larval output rates were always slower than their loading rates (mixed-effect model: X2 = 11.16, df = 1; P = 0.0008; Sidak’s MCT: large: t = 18.02, df = 17; P < 0.0001; medium: t = 9.59, df = 17; P < 0.0001; Figure S3; Supplementary File 3). The large-sized larval output rate was 150.2 (± 20.0) estimated individuals per second while the medium-sized larval output rate was 228.6 (± 48.8) estimated individuals per second (Figure 2).

Effects of body size and particle size plate hole diameter on likelihood of instantaneous death

Medium-sized larvae from batches one and two weighed 0.1076 (± 0.0061) and 0.1055 (± 0.0043) g, respectively, while large-sized larvae from these two batches weighed 0.1724 (± 0.0079) and 0.1749 (± 0.0066) g. Both were within the SD of the means of our medium- and large-sized populations used for the mechanical separation by body segment test.

A greater proportion of BSFL got stuck at the blade and did not make it through the particle size plate, if a smaller particle size plate hole diameter was used (Figure 3; Z < –3.78; P < 0.001), or if the larvae were smaller in body size (Figure 3; z ratio = 2.47; P < 0.02). The (mean ± SD) of all medium-sized larvae that got stuck at the blade when using the smallest plate hole diameter was 14.99 (± 3.21)% compared to 9.81 (± 1.13)% with the medium hole diameter, and 8.19 (± 1.51)% with the largest. For the large-sized larvae we saw 15.69 (± 1.49), 10.84 (± 0.81) and 9.19 (± 0.79)% stuck at the blade with the smallest, medium and largest plate hole diameter, respectively. The likelihood of instantaneous death for BSFL that got stuck at the blade did not vary based on particle size plate hole diameter or larval body size (Z > –2.32; P > 0.05). Across all larvae, only 2.65 (± 3.68)% showed instantaneous death when stuck at the blade (range: 0.00–13.12%).

Figure 3. Percentage of black soldier fly larvae stuck at the blade relative to particle size plate hole diameter or larval body size, and likelihood of instantaneous death. A greater percentage of larvae got stuck at the blade when a smaller particle size plate hole diameter was used (Generalised linear model; S-M: Z = –9.98; P < 0.0001; S-L: Z = –13.59; P < 0.0001; M-L: Z = –3.78; P = 0.0005). Further, a greater percentage of large-sized larvae were stuck at the blade than medium-sized larvae (Generalised linear model; Z = –2.47; P = 0.013). Letters indicate statistically significant differences between hole diameters or larval sizes, with P < 0.05.

A greater percentage of BSFL made it through the particle size plate, the larger the hole diameter (Z < –12.38; P < 0.0001). The likelihood of instantaneous death for larvae that made it past the particle size plate varied based on particle size plate hole diameter, but not larval body size (Figure 4; Z = 1.26; P = 0.21). In terms of experiencing an instantaneous death, we observed 99.27 (± 0.69)% with the smallest plate hole diameter and 84.97 (± 2.33) and 59.26 (± 3.10)% with the medium and largest, respectively.

Figure 4. Instantaneous death for black soldier fly larvae relative to hole plate diameter. A greater percentage of larvae experience an instantaneous death when a smaller particle size plate hole diameter was used (Generalised linear model; S-M: Z = –12.38; P < 0.0001; S-L: Z = –16.12; P < 0.0001; M-L: Z = –14.22; P < 0.0001). Letters indicate statistically significant differences with P < 0.0001.

The overall likelihood of experiencing an instantaneous death (when considering both the larvae that made it through the plate and those stuck at the blade) varied based on particle size plate hole diameter (Figure 5; Z > –27.49; P < 0.0001), but not larval body size (Figure 5; X2 = 0.01; P = 0.91). Across all larvae in a run, 83.82 (± 2.57)% experienced an instantaneous death when using the smallest plate hole diameter with 76.03 (± 2.66) and 53.80 (± 2.62)% experiencing instantaneous death with the medium and largest hole diameter, respectively.

Figure 5. Instantaneous death for all black soldier fly larvae in a 500 g run (stuck at blade and past plate) relative to hole diameter. A greater percentage of larvae experience an instantaneous death when a smaller particle size plate hole diameter was used (Generalised linear model; S-M: Z = –8.24; P < 0.0001; S-L: Z = –27.49; P < 0.0001; M-L: Z = –20.44; P < 0.0001). Letters indicate statistically significant differences with P < 0.0001.

Finally, a total of 743 BSFL were found within the tube leading up to the blade at the end of runs, across all replicates; of these, 6.19% had received externally observable injuries (5.34 and 6.90% of medium- and large-sized larvae, respectively).

Discussion

We found that very few BSFL died instantly after receiving a cut to a single body segment. The segments in which cuts produced some likelihood of instantaneous death varied based on larval size, with smaller larvae (7 DOL) more likely to die instantly than larger larvae (23–24 DOL). This is likely a result of two factors: (1) nervous system location within the body cavity changing as the animals’ grow non-isometrically in body and brain mass (Barrett et al. Reference Barrett, Godfrey, Sterner and Waddell2022); and (2) reduced oxygen availability due to proportionally increased haemolymph loss in smaller larvae. Larvae exhibited a variety of abnormal behaviours in response to mechanical separation of different body segments, including continuous rolling, thrashing, or backward locomotion. Despite widespread reports of insect self-cannibalism in response to injuries that rupture the body cavity (e.g. Eisemann et al. Reference Eisemann, Jorgensen, Merritt, Rice, Cribb, Webb and Zalucki1984), we found that only one larva (0.63% of subjects) engaged in this behaviour during our study (Supplementary Video 10 in Barrett et al. Reference Barrett, Miranda, Veloso, Flint, Perl, Martinez, Fischer and Tomberlin2023c).

Particle size plate hole diameter, but not larval body size (across the range 106–175 mg in mass), affected the likelihood of instantaneous death when using a standard meat grinder design. The likelihood of instantaneous death was highest (84%) when the smallest particle size plate hole diameter was used (2.55 mm) and lowest (54%) when the largest particle size plate hole diameter was used (12 mm). However, a significant challenge in using this slaughter method to generate instantaneous death was the incomplete slaughter of a group of larvae that got stuck at the blade at the end of a run: only 3% of these larvae experienced an instantaneous death. If this population was removed (e.g. all larvae made it through the particle size plate), instantaneous death was more likely across all plate sizes: 99% for the smallest plate and 59% for the largest.

From these data, we can make the following recommendations to producers to ensure a 99% chance of instantaneous death for their larvae when using grinding for slaughter:

  • Validate mortality rates with each machine, using the parameters defined here;

  • For grinding machines that use a particle size plate, use hole diameters 2.55 mm or smaller for BSFL populations that have a minimum average body mass of 106 mg;

  • To prevent BSFL from being incompletely slaughtered (e.g. stuck at the blade), run a filler (substrate, dead BSFL, vegetables, etc) through the machine at the end of the run to ensure all BSFL are completely processed; and

  • When using machines with other designs, or slaughtering BSFL smaller than 106 mg or larger than 175 mg in average mass, producers should test their specific SOP (see methodology and materials in Supplementary Files 1 and 2) to determine the likelihood of instantaneous death.

An important limitation of our results is that we were unable to assess any injuries that occurred in the machine prior to reaching the blade/plate, which could have contributed to pain/suffering prior to the time of death. We found that larvae spend 3.78 s in the machine (the time from pouring to output), meaning there are several seconds during which time larvae may incur an injury, prior to death at the blade/plate. Indeed, 6.19% of larvae found in the tube, anterior to the blade, at the end of runs were injured; however, given the unusual low-density loading of the machine at the very end of a run, it is unclear if these larvae are representative of the experiences of all larvae.

Grinding may also serve as a method for humane depopulation, should producers need to cull livestock in response to an emergency (e.g. disease outbreak). In cases of depopulation, insects may not be separated from their feeding substrate, while at times of slaughter (and thus in our study) larvae have been separated from their feed. Our results may not accurately reflect instances of depopulation where substrate would still be mixed in with larvae, or when larvae are smaller than 106 mg in mass (as larvae may need to be depopulated at very early instars). Until empirical data on these body sizes, and with substrate mixed in, are tested, we recommend producers monitor their own grinding-depopulation SOPs via modification of the previously mentioned methodology and materials in Supplementary Files 1 and 2.

Overall, our results suggest that grinding can serve as an instantaneous method of slaughter for 106–175 mg BSFL, but that SOP strongly affects the probability of humane death. Small particle size plate hole diameters, fillers at the ends of runs to reduce the probability of incomplete slaughter, and testing of each novel machine design or larval body size can ensure grinding is used humanely for the slaughter of BSFL. Furthermore, determining if the method is viable in terms of economics and practicality should also be considered. Finally, while grinding may serve as an instantaneous method of slaughter, it may still lead to public scrutiny of insect slaughter practices due to negative public perception of methods employed; further research into the social acceptability of this practice for insect farming would be valuable.

Animal welfare implications

Currently, billions of farmed BSFL are slaughtered each year with no established SOPs to ensure instantaneous death. This study provides the first empirically supported guidance for humane processing of BSFL; implementation of these practices by producers would help reduce the potential risk of unnecessary suffering for billions of animals.

Supplementary material

The supplementary material for this article can be found at http://doi.org/10.1017/awf.2024.10.

Acknowledgements

Thanks to Dr Terry McGlynn (CSUDH) for providing lab space to perform some of this research.

Competing interest

MB and BF report a relationship with the Insect Welfare Research Society that includes: board of advisors (unpaid). CP reports a relationship with the Insect Welfare Research Society that includes: employment. JKT reports a relationship with EVO Conversion Systems, LLC.

Regarding funding, MB was an NSF postdoctoral research fellow (2109399) at the time this work was conducted. CP was supported by the Insect Welfare Research Society. JKT and CF appreciate financial support from the Texas A & M AgriLife Research State Air Quality Initiative (SAQI). JKT and CM used resources from the Texas A&M AgriLife Institute for Advancing Health Through Agriculture.

Footnotes

Author contributions: Conceptualisation: MB, BF, JT; Data curation: MB; Formal analysis: CP, MB; Investigation: MB, CM, IV, CF, AM; Supervision: JT, BF; Methodology: MB, CM, CF; Visualisation: CP, MB; Resources: JT; Funding acquisition: JT; Writing – original draft: MB, CM; Writing – review & editing: MB, CM, CF, CP, BF, JT.

References

Adamo, SA 2016 Do insects feel pain? A question at the intersection of animal behaviour, philosophy and robotics. Animal Behaviour 118: 7579. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.anbehav.2016.05.005Google Scholar
Adamo, SA 2019 Is it pain if it does not hurt? On the unlikelihood of insect pain. The Canadian Entomologist 151: 685695. https://doi.org/10.4039/tce.2019.49CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Addeo, NF, Li, C, Rusch, TW, Dickerson, AJ, Tarone, AM, Bovera, F and Tomberlin, JK 2022 Impact of age, size, and sex on adult black soldier fly [Hermetia illucens L. (Diptera: Stratiomyidae)] thermal preference. Journal of Insects as Food and Feed 8: 129139. https://doi.org/10.3920/JIFF2021.0076CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barrett, M and Adcock, SJJ 2023 Animal welfare science: an integral piece of sustainable insect agriculture. Journal of Insects as Food and Feed 1: 115. https://doi.org/10.1163/23524588-20230126Google Scholar
Barrett, M, Chia, S, Fischer, B and Tomberlin, JK 2023a Welfare considerations for farming black soldier flies, Hermetia illucens (Diptera: Stratiomyidae): a model for the insects as food and feed industry. Journal of Insects as Food and Feed 9: 119148. https://doi.org/10.3920/JIFF2022.0041CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barrett, M and Fischer, B 2023 Challenges in farmed insect welfare: Beyond the question of sentience. Animal Welfare 32: e4. https://doi.org/10.1017/awf.2022.5Google Scholar
Barrett, M and Fischer, B 2024 The era beyond Eisemann et al. (1984): Insect pain in the 21st Century. OSF Preprints. https://osf.io/preprints/osf/ng7puGoogle Scholar
Barrett, M, Godfrey, RK, Schnell, A and Fischer, B 2023b Farmed yellow mealworm (Tenebrio molitor; Coleoptera: Tenebrionidae) welfare: Species-specific recommendations for a global industry. Journal of Insects as Food and Feed. https://doi.org/10.1017/awf.2024.10Google Scholar
Barrett, M, Godfrey, RK, Sterner, EJ and Waddell, EA 2022 Impacts of development and adult sex on brain cell numbers in the Black Soldier Fly, Hermetia illucens L. (Diptera: Stratiomyidae). Arthropod Structure & Development 70: 101174. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.asd.2022.101174Google Scholar
Barrett, M, Miranda, C, Veloso, IT, Flint, C, Perl, CD, Martinez, A, Fischer, B, and Tomberlin, JK 2023c OSF Project: Grinding as a slaughter method for farmed black soldier fly (Hermetia illucens) larvae: Empirically supported recommendations for more instantaneous and humane practice. OSF. https://osf.io/69p7h (accessed 16th January 2024).Google Scholar
Barrett, M, Tigreros, N, Davidowitz, G and O’Donnell, S 2023d Impact of body size on critical thermal maxima in female solitary desert bees. Ecological Entomology n/a. https://doi.org/10.1111/een.13272Google Scholar
Barron, AB and Klein, C 2016 What insects can tell us about the origins of consciousness. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science 113: 49004908.Google Scholar
Bear, C 2019 Approaching insect death: Understandings and practices of the UK’s edible insect farmers. Society & Animals 27: 751768. https://doi.org/10.1163/15685306-00001871CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Birch, J 2017 Animal sentience and the precautionary principle. Animal Sentience 2. https://doi.org/10.51291/2377-7478.1200CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Birch, J, Burn, C, Schnell, A, Browning, H and Crump, A 2021 Review of the evidence of sentience in cephalopod molluscs and decapod crustaceans. London School of Economics. https://www.lse.ac.uk/news/news-assets/pdfs/2021/sentience-in-cephalopod-molluscs-and-decapod-crustaceans-final-report-november-2021.pdfGoogle Scholar
Brooks, ME, Kristensen, K, Benthem, KJ van, Magnusson, A, Berg, CW, Nielsen, A, Skaug, HJ, Mächler, M and Bolker, BM 2017 glmmTMB balances speed and flexibility among packages for zero-inflated generalized linear mixed modeling. The R Journal 9: 378400.Google Scholar
Carlson, T 2023 Chef Joseph Yoon: Edible insects are just another option for humans to consider. Fox News. https://www.foxnews.com/video/6325081705112 (accessed 16th January 2024).Google Scholar
Chia, SY, Tanga, CM, van Loon, JJ and Dicke, M 2019 Insects for sustainable animal feed: inclusive business models involving smallholder farmers. Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability 41: 2330. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cosust.2019.09.003Google Scholar
Council on Animal Affairs 2018 The emerging insect industry. Council on Animal Affairs. https://english.rda.nl/advisory-reports/documents/publications/2018/09/03/the-emerging-insect-industryGoogle Scholar
Cribari-Neto, F and Zeileis, A 2010 Beta regression in R. Journal of Statistical Software 34: 124. https://doi.org/10.18637/jss.v034.i02Google Scholar
Dawkins, MS 2017 Animal welfare with and without consciousness. Journal of Zoology 301: 110. https://doi.org/10.1111/jzo.12434Google Scholar
de Goede, D, Erens, J, Kapesomenou, E and Peters, M 2013 Large scale insect rearing and animal welfare. In: Röcklinsberg, H and Sandin, P (Eds.) The Ethics of Consumption pp 236243. Wageningen Academic Publishers: Wageningen, The Netherlands.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
de Jong, B and Nikolik, G 2021 No longer crawling: Insect protein to come of age in the 2020s. p 9. RaboBank: Utrecht, The Netherlands.Google Scholar
Department for Environment, Food, and Rural Affairs 2023 Life cycle assessment of UK insect protein production processes for pig and poultry feed. https://atamis-9529.my.salesforcesites.com/ProSpend__CS_ContractPage?SearchType=Projects&uid=a078d00000673bnAAA&searchStr=&sortStr=Recently+Published&page=&filters=&County=Google Scholar
Delvendahl, N, Rumpold, BA and Langen, N 2022 Edible insects as food-Insect welfare and ethical aspects from a consumer perspective. Insects 13: 121. https://doi.org/10.3390/insects13020121Google Scholar
Eisemann, CH, Jorgensen, WK, Merritt, DJ, Rice, MJ, Cribb, BW, Webb, PD and Zalucki, MP 1984 Do insects feel pain? — A biological view. Experientia 40: 164167. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01963580Google Scholar
Elwood, RW 2023 Behavioural indicators of pain and suffering in arthropods and might pain bite back? Animals 13: 2602. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani13162602CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
EuroGroup for Animals 2023 The future of insect farming: Where’s the catch? EuroGroup for Animals. https://www.eurogroupforanimals.org/files/eurogroupforanimals/2023-03/The_future_of_insect_farming__where%E2%80%99s_the_catch__final_ver.pdf (accessed 16th January 2024).Google Scholar
Fischer, B, Barrett, M, Adcock, S, Barron, A, Browning, H, Chittka, L, Drinkwater, E, Gibbons, M, Haverkamp, A, and Perl, C 2023 Guidelines for protecting and promoting insect welfare in research. Insect Welfare Research Society. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/370441807_2023_Guidelines_for_Protecting_and_Promoting_Insect_Welfare_in_Research (accessed 16th January 2024).Google Scholar
Fischer, B and Sandall, E 2023 If adult insets matter, how much do juveniles matter? Rethink Priorities. https://rethinkpriorities.org/publications/how-much-do-juveniles-matterGoogle Scholar
Fox, J and Weisberg, S 2019 An R Companion to Applied Regression, 3rd Edition. Sage Publications: New York, NY, USA.Google Scholar
Fukuda, EP, Carrasco, MN, Perez, AJ, Fischer, B and Drewery, ML 2023 US consumer perceptions of insects as livestock feed: ethical considerations for insects. Journal of Insects as Food and Feed 1: 115. https://doi.org/10.1163/23524588-20230028Google Scholar
Gibbons, M, Crump, A, Barrett, M, Sarlak, S, Birch, J and Chittka, L 2022 Chapter three - Can insects feel pain? A review of the neural and behavioural evidence. Advances in Insect Physiology pp 155229. Academic Press: Cambridge, MA, USA.Google Scholar
Gibbons, M and Sarlak, S 2020 Inhibition of pain or response to injury in invertebrates and vertebrates. Animal Sentience 5. https://doi.org/10.51291/2377-7478.1649Google Scholar
GraphPad Software 2023 GraphPad Prism v 9.5.1 for Windows. GraphPad: Boston, MA, USA.Google Scholar
Hogsette, JA 1992 New diets for production of house flies and stable flies (Diptera: Muscidae) in the laboratory. Journal of Economic Entomology 85: 22912294. https://doi.org/10.1093/jee/85.6.2291Google Scholar
Innovafeed 2020 Largest insect protein facility in Illinois. https://www.newprotein.net/news/the-worlds-largest-insect-protein-facility-is-coming-to-illinois (accessed 16th January 2024).Google Scholar
IPIFF 2019 Ensuring high standards of animal welfare in insect production pp 12. IPIFF: Brussels, Belgium.Google Scholar
Kakrada, E and Colombo, M 2022 Extending the null hypothesis to invertebrate pain sentience. Animal Sentience 7. https://doi.org/10.51291/2377-7478.1754CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Klein, C and Barron, A 2016 Insects have the capacity for subjective experience. Animal Sentience 1. https://doi.org/10.51291/2377-7478.1113Google Scholar
Klobučar, T and Fisher, DN 2023 When do we start caring about insect welfare? Neotropical Entomology 52: 510. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13744-022-01023-zGoogle Scholar
Kortsmit, Y, van der Bruggen, M, Wertheim, B, Dicke, M, Beukeboom, L and van Loon, J 2023 Behaviour of two fly species reared for livestock feed: optimising production and insect welfare. Journal of Insects as Food and Feed 9: 149169. https://doi.org/10.3920/JIFF2021.0214CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lambert, H, Elwin, A and D’Cruze, N 2021 Wouldn’t hurt a fly? A review of insect cognition and sentience in relation to their use as food and feed. Applied Animal Behaviour Science 243: 105432. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.applanim.2021.105432CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lenth, R 2023 _emmeans: Estimated marginal means, aka least-squares means_. R packageversion 1.8.5. https://CRAN.R-project.org/package=emmeansGoogle Scholar
Lighton, JRB and Turner, RJ 2004 Thermolimit respirometry: an objective assessment of critical thermal maxima in two sympatric desert harvester ants, Pogonomyrmex rugosus and P. californicus. Journal of Experimental Biology 207: 19031913. https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.00970Google Scholar
Loon, MSV and Bovenkerk, B 2021 The ethics and mindedness of insects. Justice and Food Security in a Changing Climate: 218223. https://doi.org/10.3920/978-90-8686-915-2_32CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Makkar, HPS 2018 Review: Feed demand landscape and implications of food-not feed strategy for food security and climate change. Animal 12: 17441754. https://doi.org/10.1017/S175173111700324XGoogle Scholar
Makkar, HPS, Tran, G, Heuzé, V and Ankers, P 2014 State-of-the-art on use of insects as animal feed. Animal Feed Science and Technology 197: 133. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.anifeedsci.2014.07.008Google Scholar
Michel, M 2019 Fish and microchips: On fish pain and multiple realization. Philosophical Studies 176: 24112428.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mikhalevich, I and Powell, R 2020 Minds without spines: Evolutionarily inclusive animal ethics. Animal Sentience 29Google Scholar
Miranda, CD, Cammack, JA and Tomberlin, JK 2020 Mass production of the Black Soldier Fly, Hermetia illucens (L.), (Diptera: Stratiomyidae) reared on three manure types. Animals 10: 1243. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani10071243Google Scholar
Overgaard, M 2021 Insect consciousness. Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience 15Google Scholar
Parodi, A, Ipema, AF, Van Zanten, HHE, Bolhuis, JE, Van Loon, JJA and De Boer, IJM 2022 Principles for the responsible use of farmed insects as livestock feed. Nature Food 3: 972974. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43016-022-00641-5CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Purkayastha, D and Sarkar, S 2022 Sustainable waste management using black soldier fly larva: A review. International Journal of Environmental Science and Technology 19: 1270112726. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13762-021-03524-7Google Scholar
R Core Team 2019. R: A language and environment for statistical computing R Foundation for statistical Computing: Vienna, Austria. https://www.Rproject.org/Google Scholar
Reynolds, M 2023 Insect farming is booming. But is it cruel? Wired. https://www.wired.co.uk/article/insect-farming-sentience (accessed 16th January 2024).Google Scholar
Rowe, A 2020 Insects raised for food and feed — global scale, practices, and policy. https://rethinkpriorities.org/publications/insects-raised-for-food-and-feed (accessed 16th January 2024).Google Scholar
Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals 2023 What does the term humane killing or humane slaughter mean? RSPCA. https://kb.rspca.org.au/knowledge-base/what-does-the-term-humane-killing-or-humane-slaughter-mean/ (accessed 16th January 2024).Google Scholar
UK Government 2015 Schedule 4. https://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2015/1782/schedule/4 (accessed 16th January 2024)Google Scholar
United Nations 2022 World population prospects 2022: Summary of results | Population Division. United Nations: Geneva, Switzerland.Google Scholar
van Huis, A 2013 Potential of insects as food and feed in assuring food security. Annual Review of Entomology 58: 563583. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-ento-120811-153704Google Scholar
van Huis, A 2021 Welfare of farmed insects. Journal of Insects as Food and Feed 7: 573584. https://doi.org/10.3920/JIFF2020.0061Google Scholar
van Huis, A and Gasco, L 2023 Insects as feed for livestock production. Science 379: 138139. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.adc9165Google Scholar
van Huis, A and Tomberlin, J 2017 Insects as Food and Feed: From Production to Consumption, 1st Edition. Wageningen Academic Publishers: Wageningen, The Netherlands.Google Scholar
Voulgari-Kokota, A, van Loon, MS and Bovenkerk, B 2023 Insects as mini-livestock: Considering insect welfare in feed production. NJAS: Impact in Agricultural and Life Sciences 95: 2191797. https://doi.org/10.1080/27685241.2023.2191797Google Scholar
World Wildlife Fund and Tesco 2021 The future of feed: A WWF roadmap to accelerating insect protein in UK feeds. World Wildlife Fund: London, UK.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1. Proportion of larvae of different ages/sizes dead instantly, or by 90 s, due to cuts from a razor blade at different body segments. The proportion of larvae dead by body segment cut location, (a) instantly or (c) by 90 s; and the proportion of larvae dead across all treatments (cuts in S1–S12) (b) instantly or (d) by 90 s by age/size. DOL = day old larvae; BSFL = black soldier fly larvae.

Figure 1

Table 1. Mean mass, and mass ranges, of larvae from each age/size group in g

Figure 2

Figure 2. Estimated number of individual black soldier fly larvae (BSFL) processed per second using the grinding technique. Showing (a) estimated number of individual larvae of a large and medium body mass loaded per second into the hopper of the grinder and (b) estimated grinder output rate for large- and medium-sized larvae.

Figure 3

Figure 3. Percentage of black soldier fly larvae stuck at the blade relative to particle size plate hole diameter or larval body size, and likelihood of instantaneous death. A greater percentage of larvae got stuck at the blade when a smaller particle size plate hole diameter was used (Generalised linear model; S-M: Z = –9.98; P < 0.0001; S-L: Z = –13.59; P < 0.0001; M-L: Z = –3.78; P = 0.0005). Further, a greater percentage of large-sized larvae were stuck at the blade than medium-sized larvae (Generalised linear model; Z = –2.47; P = 0.013). Letters indicate statistically significant differences between hole diameters or larval sizes, with P < 0.05.

Figure 4

Figure 4. Instantaneous death for black soldier fly larvae relative to hole plate diameter. A greater percentage of larvae experience an instantaneous death when a smaller particle size plate hole diameter was used (Generalised linear model; S-M: Z = –12.38; P < 0.0001; S-L: Z = –16.12; P < 0.0001; M-L: Z = –14.22; P < 0.0001). Letters indicate statistically significant differences with P < 0.0001.

Figure 5

Figure 5. Instantaneous death for all black soldier fly larvae in a 500 g run (stuck at blade and past plate) relative to hole diameter. A greater percentage of larvae experience an instantaneous death when a smaller particle size plate hole diameter was used (Generalised linear model; S-M: Z = –8.24; P < 0.0001; S-L: Z = –27.49; P < 0.0001; M-L: Z = –20.44; P < 0.0001). Letters indicate statistically significant differences with P < 0.0001.

Supplementary material: File

Barrett et al. supplementary material 1

Barrett et al. supplementary material
Download Barrett et al. supplementary material 1(File)
File 607.7 KB
Supplementary material: File

Barrett et al. supplementary material 2

Barrett et al. supplementary material
Download Barrett et al. supplementary material 2(File)
File 18.8 KB
Supplementary material: File

Barrett et al. supplementary material 3

Barrett et al. supplementary material
Download Barrett et al. supplementary material 3(File)
File 174.7 KB