Insect frass fertilizer as a regenerative input for improved biological nitrogen fixation and sustainable bush bean production

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Authors

Chepkorir, Agnes
Beesigamukama, Dennis
Gitari, Harun I.
Chia, Shaphan Y.
Subramanian, Sevgan
Ekesi, Sunday
Abucheli, Birachi Eliud
Rubyogo, Jean Claude
Zahariadis, Theodore
Athanasiou, Gina

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Frontiers Media

Abstract

Bush bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) production is undermined by soil degradation and low biological nitrogen fixation (BNF) capacity. This study evaluated the effect of black soldier fly frass fertilizer (BSFFF) on bush bean growth, yield, nutrient uptake, BNF, and profitability, in comparison with commercial organic fertilizer (Phymyx, Phytomedia International Ltd., Kiambu, Kenya), synthetic fertilizer (NPK), and rhizobia inoculant (Biofix, MEA Fertilizers, Nairobi, Kenya). The organic fertilizers were applied at rates of 0, 15, 30, and 45 kg N ha−1 while the NPK was applied at 40 kg N ha−1 , 46 kg P ha−1 , and 60 kg K ha−1 . The fertilizers were applied singly and in combination with rhizobia inoculant to determine the interactive effects on bush bean production. Results showed that beans grown using BSFFF were the tallest, with the broadest leaves, and the highest chlorophyll content. Plots treated with 45 kg N ha−1 BSFFF produced beans with more flowers (7 – 8%), pods (4 – 9%), and seeds (9 – 11%) compared to Phymyx and NPK treatments. The same treatment also produced beans with 6, 8, and 18% higher 100-seed weight, compared to NPK, Phymyx, and control treatments, respectively. Beans grown in soil amended with 30 kg N ha−1 of BSFFF had 3–14-fold higher effective root nodules, fixed 48%, 31%, and 91% more N compared to Phymyx, NPK, and rhizobia, respectively, and boosted N uptake (19 – 39%) compared to Phymyx and NPK treatments. Application of 45 kg N ha−1 of BSFFF increased bean seed yield by 43%, 72%, and 67% compared to the control, NPK and equivalent rate of Phymyx, respectively. The net income and gross margin achieved using BSFFF treatments were 73 – 239% and 118 – 184% higher than the values obtained under Phymyx treatments. Our findings demonstrate the high efficacy of BSFFF as a novel soil input and sustainable alternative for boosting BNF and improving bush bean productivity.

Description

DATA AVAILABITY STATEMENT: The original contributions presented in the study are included in the article/supplementary material. Further inquiries can be directed to the corresponding authors.

Keywords

Symbiotic nitrogen fixation, Bush bean yield, Circular economy, Soil health, Climate-smart fertilizer, Black soldier fly frass fertilizer (BSFFF), Biological nitrogen fixation (BNF), Black soldier fly (Hermetia illucens L.), Bush bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.), SDG-02: Zero hunger

Sustainable Development Goals

SDG-02:Zero Hunger

Citation

Chepkorir, A., Beesigamukama, D., Gitari, H.I., Chia, S.Y., Subramanian, S., Ekesi, S., Abucheli, B.E., Rubyogo, J.C., Zahariadis, T., Athanasiou, G., Zachariadi, A., Zachariadis, V., Tenkouano, A. & Tanga, C.M. (2024) Insect frass fertilizer as a regenerative input for improved biological nitrogen fixation and sustainable bush bean production. Frontiers in Plant Science 15:1460599. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2024.1460599.