Two trials were conducted to assess the acceptance, safety and digestibility of diets containing various inclusion levels of partially defatted black soldier fly (Hermetia illucens) larvae (BSFL) meal and BSFL oil by dogs. In Trial 1, five extruded diets were evaluated for acceptance in adult Beagle dogs (n=20; 10 male, 10 female) during a 48-hour period. Diets contained graded levels of BSFL meal (5.0, 10.0, and 20.0%), or graded levels of BSFL oil (2.5 and 5.0%), and all diets were well-accepted. Thus, a digestibility trial (Trial 2) was run with 56 adult dogs (16 male, 40 female) allocated into seven dietary treatments; dogs were offered an extruded control diet containing no BSFL meal or oil, or extruded diets where BSFL meal partially replaced poultry by-product meal and corn meal at dietary levels of 5, 10, or 20% inclusion, or diets with BSFL oil partially replacing poultry fat at a 1:1 ratio at levels of 1, 2.5, or 5% inclusion. The treatment diets were fed for 28 days, during which time dogs were monitored for health (via physical examinations, clinical observations, and blood chemistry and hematology) and ingredient evaluation (via body weight, feed consumption, stool observation, and fecal nutrient apparent total tract digestibility). There were no significant differences in body weight or food consumption between treatment groups (P > 0.05) and daily observations indicated that the general health of the animals was maintained throughout the study. Stool quality was maintained at 3.2 to 3.4 (on a five-point scale with a score of one being watery diarrhea and a score of five being hard, dry and crumbly) per treatment group over the fecal observation period (days 22-27), indicating a well-formed, sticky stool. All group mean hematology and blood chemistry parameters remained within normal limits for dogs. Apparent total tract digestibility of dry matter, protein, fat, and calories was not affected by treatment (P > 0.05). In general, amino acid digestibility was not impacted by treatment although some minor changes were observed. Apparent total tract digestibility was high for all nutrients examined. Overall, it was concluded that BSFL meal and BSFL oil are well-tolerated by dogs and their consumption results in no impact to physiology that would be concerning. Based on these data, BSFL meal and oil did not affect general health and could be included safely in dog diets.

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