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Bugs are food of the future: UN agency

Bugs are food of the future: UN agency
By Ella Ide | AFP – 2 hours 12 minutes ago

• AFP/AFP/File - A woman prepares grubs to cook in the kitchen of Insects Inter in Bangkok, September 12, 2002. Beetles, caterpillars and wasps could supplement diets around the world as an environmentally friendly …more food source if only Western consumers could get over their "disgust", the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) says less

A picture taken on August 30, 2012 shows a stag beetle, in Saint Philbert sur Risle, …

A restaurant in Mexico City serves up a grasshopper taco, on October 19, 2001. Beetles, …

A US Marine eats an insect during a jungle survival program as part in Sattahip, …


Beetles, caterpillars and wasps could supplement diets around the world as an environmentally friendly food source if only Western consumers could get over their "disgust", the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) said on Monday.


"The main message is really: 'Eat insects'", Eva Mueller, director of forest economics at the FAO, told a press conference in Rome.


"Insects are abundant and they are a valuable source of protein and minerals," she said.


"Two billion people -- a third of the world's population -- are already eating insects because they are delicious and nutritious," she said.


Also speaking at the press conference was Gabon Forestry Minister Gabriel Tchango who said: "Insect consumption is part of our daily life."


He said some insects -- like beetle larvae and grilled termites -- were considered delicacies.


"Insects contribute about 10 percent of animal protein consumed by the population," he said.


The report said insect farming was "one of the many ways to address food and feed insecurity".


"Insects are everywhere and they reproduce quickly, and they have high growth and feed conversion rates and a low environmental footprint," said the report, co-authored by the FAO and Wageningen University in the Netherlands.


But the authors admitted that "consumer disgust remains one of the largest barriers to the adoption of insects as viable sources of protein in many Western countries".


Mueller said that brands such as yoghurt maker Danone and Italian alcoholic drinks maker Campari used dye from insects to colour their products.


It suggested that the food industry could help in "raising the status of insects" by including them in recipes and putting them on restaurant menus.


"Beetles, grasshoppers and other insects... are now showing up though on the menus of some restaurants in some European capitals," said Mueller, as she showed photo slides of crickets being used as decoration on top of high-end restaurant desserts.


The report also called for wider use of insects as feed for livestock, saying that poor regulation and under-investment currently meant it "cannot compete" with traditional sources of feed.


"The use of insects on a large scale as a feed ingredient is technically feasible, and established companies in various parts of the world are already leading the way," it added, highlighting in particular producers in China, South Africa, Spain and the United States.


"Insects can supplement traditional feed sources such as soy, maize, grains and fishmeal," it said, adding that the ones with most potential were larvae of the black soldier fly, the common housefly and the yellow mealworm.


The report also said the insects most commonly consumed by humans are beetles (31 percent), caterpillars (18 percent) and bees, wasps and ants (14 percent), followed by grasshoppers, locusts and crickets (13 percent).


The report said a total of 1,900 species of insects are consumed around the world.


It said trade in insects was thriving in cities such as Bangkok and Kinshasa and that a similar culture of insect consumption -- entomophagy -- should be established elsewhere, stressing that it was often cheaper to farm insects.


While beef has an iron content of 6.0 miligrams per 100 grams of dry weight, the iron content of locusts varies between 8.0 and and 20 miligrams per 100 grams, the report said.


It also said that insects require just two kilograms of feed to produce one kilogram of insect meat compared to a ratio of 8-to-1 for beef.


The report concluded: "History has shown that dietary patterns can change quickly, particularly in a globalised world. The rapid acceptance of raw fish in the form of sushi is a good example."


"Not everybody is ready to pop a bug in their mouth," Mueller said. "It will probably take a while. But some people are already doing it."

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