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Treatment of biowaste commingled with biodegradable bioplastic films using Black Soldier Fly larvae: Generation and fate of micro-plastics

Journal of Environmental Management 2024 2 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Valentina Grossule, Gea Oliveri Conti, Paola Rapisarda, Eloise Pulvirenti, Margherita Ferrante, Maria Cristina Lavagnolo

Summary

Experiments using Black Soldier Fly larvae to process food waste mixed with starch-based biodegradable plastic films showed that the larvae generate and accumulate small biodegradable microplastic particles (under 50 µm) during digestion. As biodegradable plastics become more common in food packaging, this finding highlights a gap in understanding their fate in biological waste treatment systems and whether "biodegradable" microplastics pose their own environmental risks.

Body Systems

The use of Black Soldier Fly (BSF) larvae is emerging as a promising alternative for biowaste (i.e. food waste) treatment, generating larval biomass and process residues, suitable for use as animal feed and fertilizer, respectively. In line with an increasing use of starch-based bioplastics in food packaging, the presence of these biopolymers and associated biodegradable microplastics (BMPs) in food waste is expected to rise. Knowledge of the generation of BMPs and their fate in the BSF treatment process is scarce, or indeed, completely lacking in the case of small-sized BMPs (<50 μm). The present study aims to investigate the generation and potential accumulation of BMPs in BSF larvae process. Food waste mixed with starch-based bioplastic films was fed to larvae and BMPs of two particle sizes (inferior to and exceeding 10 μm in diameter) were monitored over time in rearing substrate and larval biomass. BMPs concentrations in substrate were compared with larvae-free control tests. The presence of larvae favoured the generation of BMPs. Concentrations of smaller-sized BMPs (<10 μm) increased by approximately 172% in the final substrate, and accumulated in the larval biomass with a peak exceeding the initial larval concentration by over 1000% just before prepupation, which is the typical stage they are collected when used as animal feed. These results indicate a potential risk of soil contamination by BMPs when final substrate is used as fertilizer and a risk of biomagnification phenomena when larvae are used as animal feed.

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