Pemanfaatan Budidaya Maggot untuk Pengelolaan Sampah Terpadu Menuju Ketahanan Sumber Daya di Kalurahan Wukirsari
Contributors
Purnawan
Rokhana Dwi Bekti
Muhammad Andang Novianta
Nidia Lestari
Valensi Kautsar
Suparni Setyowati Rahayu
Avorey Bias Agung Valentino Duha
Rosa Fitrijayanti
Purba Rahmatdi
Keywords
Proceeding
Track
General Track
License
Copyright (c) 2025 Seminar Nasional Hasil Penelitian dan Pengabdian Masyarakat (SemnasPPM)

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Abstract
Organic waste management remains a significant challenge in Wukirsari Village, Cangkringan, Sleman, DIY. A lack of human resources and infrastructure has prevented the Integrated Waste Management Facility (TPST) from operating optimally, resulting in waste accumulation. This community service program offers a solution: applying appropriate technology (TTG) to cultivate black soldier fly (BSF) maggots for organic waste bioconversion. The program includes socialization, training, mentoring, and evaluation activities, with the Kelompok Sadar Lingkungan Balangan as the main partner. These activities will take 3 months. The developed TTG consists of maggot cultivation equipment and a screening tool designed to improve the separation process's efficiency and produce useful products for animal feed and organic fertilizer. Evaluation results showed positive responses from participants: 97% rated the material as relevant to their needs, and 94% said it was easy to understand. Participants' knowledge level also increased significantly, with most participants falling into the "very good" category. These results indicate that the program effectively transfers technical skills while strengthening partners' independence. Through this program, the community can reduce household organic waste and gain economic benefits by using maggots as alternative feed and cashew shells as organic fertilizer. This initiative is expected to strengthen local resource resilience, open up new business opportunities, and serve as a model for sustainable, community-based, integrated waste management.