Improvement of mealworm digestion towards spent coffee grounds with assistance of feeding-inoculation

Coffee is one of the most highly consumed products in the world. Accordingly, there is an enormous amount of residues that are formed during the making of coffee. Spent coffee grounds (SCG) make up a majority of this residue with around 600g of SCG being formed from every kilogram of coffee beans us...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mahesh Krishnan Shyamkumar
Other Authors: Loo Say Chye Joachim
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/166572
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-166572
record_format dspace
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1665722023-05-06T16:45:48Z Improvement of mealworm digestion towards spent coffee grounds with assistance of feeding-inoculation Mahesh Krishnan Shyamkumar Loo Say Chye Joachim School of Materials Science and Engineering JoachimLoo@ntu.edu.sg Engineering::Materials Coffee is one of the most highly consumed products in the world. Accordingly, there is an enormous amount of residues that are formed during the making of coffee. Spent coffee grounds (SCG) make up a majority of this residue with around 600g of SCG being formed from every kilogram of coffee beans used. Despite being abundant in organic resources such as saccharides and proteins, a significant portion of SCGs are discarded every year. Thus, more methods to utilise this untapped reservoir of energy is required. A method that will be explored in this experiment is the use of SCG as a potential source of nutrition for mealworms due to its high energy content, which can in turn be used for feeding livestock such as fish. Yellow mealworms have a broad diet and thus are good candidates in attempting to digest SCG. However, SCG possesses antimicrobial properties, causing it to be not digestible to mealworms. Thus, the aim of this experiment was to attempt to improve the efficiency in the digestibility of the SCG. This was done by inoculating the SCG feedstock using bacterial strains from the gut of the mealworm that are capable of degrading SCG, which should improve the digestibility of the SCG by pre-digestion of the SCG before consumption, as well as delivering more of said bacterial colonies into the gut of the mealworm to further enhance their ability to digest SCG. The results of the study show that the feeding inoculation was successful to a certain degree, with the mealworms fed the inoculated SCG feedstock exhibiting higher levels of protein as well as showing higher levels of SCG degrading bacteria in the gut of the mealworms. However, as the survival rate, change in biomass as well as fat levels of the mealworms in the inoculated category were similar to the ones in the untreated SCG category, further experimentation will be required to be carried out to reveal how inoculated strains affect body compositions of mealworms. Bachelor of Engineering (Materials Engineering) 2023-05-05T06:54:11Z 2023-05-05T06:54:11Z 2023 Final Year Project (FYP) Mahesh Krishnan Shyamkumar (2023). Improvement of mealworm digestion towards spent coffee grounds with assistance of feeding-inoculation. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/166572 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/166572 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Materials
spellingShingle Engineering::Materials
Mahesh Krishnan Shyamkumar
Improvement of mealworm digestion towards spent coffee grounds with assistance of feeding-inoculation
description Coffee is one of the most highly consumed products in the world. Accordingly, there is an enormous amount of residues that are formed during the making of coffee. Spent coffee grounds (SCG) make up a majority of this residue with around 600g of SCG being formed from every kilogram of coffee beans used. Despite being abundant in organic resources such as saccharides and proteins, a significant portion of SCGs are discarded every year. Thus, more methods to utilise this untapped reservoir of energy is required. A method that will be explored in this experiment is the use of SCG as a potential source of nutrition for mealworms due to its high energy content, which can in turn be used for feeding livestock such as fish. Yellow mealworms have a broad diet and thus are good candidates in attempting to digest SCG. However, SCG possesses antimicrobial properties, causing it to be not digestible to mealworms. Thus, the aim of this experiment was to attempt to improve the efficiency in the digestibility of the SCG. This was done by inoculating the SCG feedstock using bacterial strains from the gut of the mealworm that are capable of degrading SCG, which should improve the digestibility of the SCG by pre-digestion of the SCG before consumption, as well as delivering more of said bacterial colonies into the gut of the mealworm to further enhance their ability to digest SCG. The results of the study show that the feeding inoculation was successful to a certain degree, with the mealworms fed the inoculated SCG feedstock exhibiting higher levels of protein as well as showing higher levels of SCG degrading bacteria in the gut of the mealworms. However, as the survival rate, change in biomass as well as fat levels of the mealworms in the inoculated category were similar to the ones in the untreated SCG category, further experimentation will be required to be carried out to reveal how inoculated strains affect body compositions of mealworms.
author2 Loo Say Chye Joachim
author_facet Loo Say Chye Joachim
Mahesh Krishnan Shyamkumar
format Final Year Project
author Mahesh Krishnan Shyamkumar
author_sort Mahesh Krishnan Shyamkumar
title Improvement of mealworm digestion towards spent coffee grounds with assistance of feeding-inoculation
title_short Improvement of mealworm digestion towards spent coffee grounds with assistance of feeding-inoculation
title_full Improvement of mealworm digestion towards spent coffee grounds with assistance of feeding-inoculation
title_fullStr Improvement of mealworm digestion towards spent coffee grounds with assistance of feeding-inoculation
title_full_unstemmed Improvement of mealworm digestion towards spent coffee grounds with assistance of feeding-inoculation
title_sort improvement of mealworm digestion towards spent coffee grounds with assistance of feeding-inoculation
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/166572
_version_ 1770567207491731456