Sustainability, circularity, and Zero Waste policies
are timely
concepts for policy development and strategies in the European Union
(EU) and other global regions. Insects can likely become key players
in the bioconversion of waste to valuable material and promise one
solution to achieve diverse societal goals. Insects further present
strategic opportunities as food products; however, it is necessary
to understand how insects accumulate and eliminate priority contaminants
from different substrates where they can be reared. In the present
study, we expanded beyond previous work with mercury (Hg) to examine
bioaccumulation kinetics in Tenebrio molitor (YMW)
and Hermetia illucens (BSF). Two-phase bioaccumulation
assays, with an uptake (contaminated Hg substrate) and elimination
phase (clean substrate), followed by toxicokinetic modeling, showed
that both insects have a high capacity to regulate Hg, often reaching
an internal steady-state concentration at level responding on the
substrate concentration of Hg. Of importance for product safety, both
insects quickly eliminated Hg after being transferred to clean substrate.
Specifically, BSF eliminated half of the accumulated Hg in approximately
1 day (after 5 days of Hg exposure) and YMW in 4–5 days (after
21 days of Hg exposure). These results provide crucial product safety
information for insect producers using possibly contaminated substrates,
specifically informing the amount of time for Hg depuration prior
to processing and commercialization for food and feed.
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