A science reporter's experiment with black soldier fly larvae is going well so far. Will the home-built system become self-sustaining?
WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. — A bin full of black soldier fly larvae are eating away at food waste inside the Full Circle Bioconversion barn in Old Lycoming Township. For owner Aubrey Fornwalt, getting into ...
Typically, waste from both people and animals is sent to landfills, incinerated or stored in engineered ponds like manure ...
A regional South Australian couple's fly larvae farm is using discarded produce to make a valuable food source.
People and animals create lots of waste that is usually sent to landfills, incinerated or stored in engineered ponds such as manure lagoons. Now, researchers publishing in ACS’ Environmental Science & ...
A Nova Scotia bug farm is biting into a booming industry expected to be worth US$4.1 billion within 10 years. “At its core, ...
LIMURU, Kenya (Reuters) - Rotten bananas? Mushy avocados? Pulped oranges? Talash Huijbers wants them all. The 25-year-old is the founder of Insectipro, a Kenyan farm rearing black soldier fly larvae ...
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Sustainable Recycling: Turning Expired Pet Food into Biodiesel and Livestock Feed with Black Soldier Fly Larvae
A recent study published in npj Science of Food explored how black soldier fly larvae (BSFL) can serve as a sustainable biorefinery, converting organic waste, specifically expired pet food, into ...
The Cool Down on MSN
Researchers uncover surprising way flies could solve 2 global crises at once: 'Clever chemistry can start to bridge that gap'
One female fly can lay 200-400 eggs. Researchers uncover surprising way flies could solve 2 global crises at once: 'Clever chemistry can start to bridge that gap' first appeared on The Cool Down.
Sign up for the Ento Industries Insect Farm Tour, where you'll get to learn more about Black Soldier Files & how they can ...
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