“…Traditional (subsistence) agriculture is based on circular sustainability model, which ensures practically nil waste as residues are recycled or used for various purposes including maintenance of soil fertility [46,47]. Rise in global population, however, necessitated the intensification of agricultural production, linear-agricultural production system, globalization of food distribution, extensive storage, and agro-industrial processing, all of which generate extensive quantities and varieties of agro-industrial and food wastes [47,48]. Previously considered of little or no economic value, harvest leftovers, crop residues, animal wastes (bones, carcasses, blood, fat, feathers, hair, cartilages, skins, viscera, and dung), and food wastes (household, food service, and retail wastes) are today viewed as valuable resources of significant economic value such that they have become co-products or raw materials from agro-industrial processing, crop, forestry, and animal production [49].…”