AP/ February 11, 2009, 3:23 PM

Scientists: Eat More Bugs

Crickets, caterpillars and grubs are high in protein and minerals and could be an important food source during droughts and other emergencies, according to scientists.

"I definitely think they can assist," said German biologist V.B. Meyer-Rochow, who regularly eats insects and wore a T-shirt with a Harlequin longhorn beetle to a U.N.-sponsored conference this month on promoting bugs as a food source.

Three dozen scientists from 15 countries gathered in this northern Thailand city, home to several dozen restaurants serving insects and other bugs. Some of their proposals were more down to earth than others.

A Japanese scientist proposed bug farms on spacecraft to feed astronauts, noting that it would be more practical than raising cows or pigs. Australian, Dutch and American researchers said more restaurants are serving the critters in their countries.

The U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization estimates 1,400 species of insects and worms are eaten in almost 90 countries in Africa, Latin America and Asia. Researchers at the conference detailed how crickets and silk worms are eaten in Thailand, grubs and grasshoppers in Africa and ants in South America.

"In certain places with certain cultures with a certain level of acceptance, then insects can very well be seen as part of the solution" to hunger, said Patrick Durst, a Bangkok-based senior forestry officer at the FAO.

The challenge, experts said, is organizing unregulated, small bug food operations in many countries so they can supplement the food that aid agencies provide. The infrastructure to raise, transport and market bugs is almost nonexistent in most countries.

Prof. Arnold van Huis, a tropical entomologist known as "Mr. Edible Insect" in his native Netherlands, blamed a Western bias against eating insects for the failure of aid agencies to incorporate bugs into their mix.

"They are completely biased," van Huis said. "They really have to change. I would urge other donor organizations to take a different attitude toward this ... It's excellent food. It can be sustainable with precautions."

There are questions about the safety of eating bugs and potential dangers from over-harvesting them, said Durst, who became interested in the practice known scientifically as entomophagy during his years working in Bangkok, where crickets and bamboo worms are sold as food by street vendors.

Tina van den Briel, senior nutritionist at the World Food Program, the U.N. agency that provides food in emergencies, expressed doubt that insects can benefit large, vulnerable populations. Most bugs are seasonal and have a short shelf life, she said.

"They can be a very good complement to the diet," said van den Briel, not a conference participant. "But they do not lend themselves to programs like ours where you transport food over long distances and where you have to store food for a few months."

She suggested a more practical benefit might be adding insects to animal feed or crushing them into a meal powder that could be used to make cookies or cakes.

Meyer-Rochow said aid agencies might even find a way to harvest crop-destroying swarms of locusts and crickets.

"These mass outbreaks could be a valuable food source," he said. "If the technology is available, they could be ground up like a paste and added to the food humans eat."
© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
23 Comments Add a Comment
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grammawhamma says:
What do these large beetles eat? I suppose we would have to grow crops to feed the beetles so we can harvest them for food. I would rather eat the crops planted for the beetle food.

Beetle Juice takes on a whole new meaning now.
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rbailey31 says:
OK,YEA,YEA,WE ALL KNOW (OR SHOULD KNOW) THAT THE GOVERMENT ALLOWS SO MUCH BUG PARTS 2 -B IN OUP PEANUT BUTTER,SPA.SAUCE,ETC..I CANNOT VISIBLY SEE THEM,BUT !! IF I HAD 2 ACTUALLY SEE & EAT LIKE IN THE ABOVE PHOTO,THEN U CAN COUNT ME OUT !!! I WOULD END UP BARFIN IT UP ANYWAY,COZ THE SIGHT OF THEM ALONE MAKES ME WANT 2 !!!GIVE ME A BOWL OF DRY PURINA DOG CHOW INSTEAD THANK YOU VERY MUCH !!!!
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extremophil says:
First they say the bees are endangered, then they say eat more bugs. Someone should make up their mind.
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dredre2k says:
People eat bugs all the time!
The FDA has acceptable limits for the amount of bug parts that can be contained in canned & process food!
So the next time you''re eating canned fruit, be sure to savor the ground up bug bits that were processed into the food ;-).
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chrisl45 says:
All I know is all my food comes from a supermarket.
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killtheliars says:
if you are starving then eat bugs. I can afford beef and chicken as well as fresh vegatables and will never eat bugs
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estabwary says:
Remember the guy who said we should eat boogers?

Here is our future: boogers & bugs.
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rf35 says:
Feed the bugs to the cattle as a replacement for the corn that''s being diverted to ethanol manufacturing. Bring the price of beef way down, up production, and the hungry get hamburger.
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erasmus6 says:
People need to start introducing bugs into the diet of their kids so that it is an accepted thing to do because in the future there isn''t going to be much to eat. You don''t want your kids to suffer do you? Better get crackin'', times a-wastin''.
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round_table says:
My theory has been that all those shows on the Discovery Channel, National Geographic, etc. that challenge young people to eat various insects set to rock or techno workout music is really an attempt to acclimatize us to some grim future scenario where your local Macdonalds is equipt with an aircraft spotlight and a large net that they reel in every so often throughout the night.
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