Comparison and Selection of Saprophagous Diptera Species for Poultry Manure Conversion

Date

2012-04-13

Authors

Lomas, Nichelle

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

University of Guelph

Abstract

Efficient disposal methods are needed to manage manure produced by industrial animal production. Saprophagous fly larvae could potentially convert manure into fertilizer and produce protein; however, the process is not well studied. Musca domestica, Hydrotaea aenescens, and Coproica hirtula were investigated to determine the most suitable species and conditions that facilitate efficient poultry manure conversion. The objectives were to (1) develop laboratory protocols and timelines for fly production; (2) identify environmental conditions that affect conversion; and (3) determine the ideal manure moisture content, depth, and fly egg-to-manure ratio for manure conversion and protein production. Mass-production was possible for every species and timelines were established for all species except C. hirtula. The most promising species for use in a conversion system was M. domestica and the presence of C. hirtula facilitated complete conversion. When using these species simultaneously the ideal initial conditions were: 77.5% moisture, 2.9cm deep and 0.82g eggs/kg manure.

Description

Keywords

poultry manure, saprophagous Diptera, manure conversion, larvae, pupal protein, fertilizer, Musca domestica, Coproica hirtula, Hydrotaea aenescens

Citation