| Literature DB >> 31508584 |
Tae-Kyung Kim1, Hae In Yong1, Young-Boong Kim1, Hyun-Wook Kim2, Yun-Sang Choi1.
Abstract
This review summarizes the current trends related to insect as food resources among consumers, industry, and academia. In Western societies, edible insects have a greater potential as animal feed than as human food because of cultural biases associated with harmful insects, although the abundant characteristics of edible insects should benefit human health. Nevertheless, many countries in Asia, Oceania, Africa, and Latin America utilize insects as a major protein source. Using insects can potentially solve problems related to the conventional food-supply chain, including global water, land, and energy deficits. Academic, industry, and government-led efforts have attempted to reduce negative perceptions of insects through developing palatable processing methods, as well as providing descriptions of health benefits and explaining the necessity of reducing reliance on other food sources. Our overview reveals that entomophagy is experiencing a steady increase worldwide, despite its unfamiliarity to the consumers influenced by Western eating habits.Entities:
Keywords: animal feed; edible insects; entomophagy; food resources
Year: 2019 PMID: 31508584 PMCID: PMC6728817 DOI: 10.5851/kosfa.2019.e53
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Sci Anim Resour ISSN: 2636-0772
Nutrition composition of edible insects (based on dry matter)
| Type of insects | Scientific name | Protein content (%) | Fat content (%) | Carbohydrates content (%) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Larvae | 54.18 | 20.24 | - | ||
| 20.00 | 15.20 | - | |||
| 23.00 | 10.20 | - | |||
| 25.70 | 23.21 | - | |||
| 56.95 | 10.00 | 7.80 | Siulapwa et al. (2012) | ||
| 55.92 | 12.10 | 10.70 | Siulapwa et al. (2012) | ||
| 44.23 | 15.36 | - | |||
| 22.06 | 66.61 | 5.53 | |||
| 46.44 | 32.70 | - | |||
| Beetle | 38.10 | 32.01 | 20.10 | ||
| 26.00 | 1.50 | - | |||
| 50.01 | 21.12 | 20.23 | |||
| 28.42 | 31.40 | - | |||
| Grasshopper | 44.59 | 49.00 | 8.40 | Siulapwa et al. (2012) | |
| 26.80 | 3.80 | - | |||
| Cricket | 6.25 | 2.34 | - | ||
| 58.32 | 11.88 | - | |||
| 55.65 | 25.14 | - | |||
| Termites | 20.10 | 28.20 | - | ||
| 43.26 | 43.00 | 32.80 | Siulapwa et al. (2012) | ||
| 22.10 | 22.50 | - | |||
| Bee | 21.00 | 12.30 | - | ||
| Dragonfly | 54.24 | 16.72 | - | ||
| 26.22 | 22.93 | - |
Do not observed in the reference.
Previous studies regarding the food processing properties of edible insects
| Type of insects | Scientific name | Observation | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Larvae | • Protein solubility | ||
| • Oil absorption capacity | |||
| • Foaming stability | |||
| Larvae | • Protein solubility | ||
| Grasshopper | • Water holding capacity | ||
| Cricket | • Oil holding capacity | ||
| • Foaming capacity | |||
| • Emulsion capacity | |||
| Larvae | • Protein solubility | ||
| • Oil absorption capacity | |||
| • Water absorption capacity | |||
| • Foaming capacity | |||
| • Emulsion capacity | |||
| Larvae | • Oil absorption capacity | ||
| Larvae | • Water absorption capacity | ||
| • Foaming capacity | |||
| • Foaming stability | |||
| • Emulsion capacity | |||
| • Emulsion stability | |||
| Larvae | • Water binding capacity | ||
| Larvae | • Fat binding capacity | ||
| • Protein solubility | |||
| Larvae | • Foaming capacity | ||
| Larvae | • Foaming stability | ||
| Larvae | • Gel formation | ||
| Cricket | |||
| Cockroach |
Harmful factors affecting the food safety of edible insects
| Issues | Derived hazard sources from edible insect | Note | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Microorganism | Insect-specific pathogenic microorganism is not harmful to human | ||
| Gut and surface | |||
| Allergene | Cross-reactivity and co-sensitisation were observed with other crustaceans | ||
| Pan-allergenic structures | Tropomyosin | ||
| Myosin | |||
| Actin | |||
| Troponin C | |||
| Tubulin | |||
| Hemocyanin | |||
| Defensin | |||
| Triosephosphate isomerase | |||
| α-Amylase | |||
| Trypsin | |||
| Phospholipase A | |||
| Hyaluronidase | |||
| Arginine kinase | |||
| Chitin | |||
| Pathogenic molds | |||
| Pathogenic yeast | |||
| Chemical or toxin | There were no reports that edible insect had toxin | ||
| Synthesis toxin | Oxalate | ||
| Tannin | |||
| Phytate | |||
| Thiaminases | |||
| Cantharidin | |||
| Toluene | |||
| Quinones | |||
| Alkanes | |||
| Cyanogenic glycosides | |||
| Microorganism toxin | |||
Sources: Belluco et al. (2013), Dematheis et al. (2012), Ribeiro et al. (2018), Schluter et al. (2017), Yun et al. (2014).
Most consumed insects as food resources traditionally in Asia
| Country | Scientific and common name of consumed insects | Consumed type | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Korea | Silkworm | Pupae | |
| Grasshopper | Adult | ||
| Japan | Grasshopper | Adult | |
| Grasshopper | Adult | ||
| Bee | Larvae, pupae | ||
| Silkworm | Pupae, female adult | ||
| China | Silkworm | Pupae | |
| Tussah silkworm | Pupae | ||
| Mealworm | Larvae | ||
| Weaver ants | Adult | ||
| Honey bee | Larvae, pupae | ||
| Locust | Adult | ||
| Scale insect | Adult | ||
| Cicadas | Adult | ||
| Stinkbugs | Adult | ||
| Termites | Adult | ||
| Dragonfly | Nymphs | ||
| India | Eri silkworm | Larvae, pupae, adult | |
| Cinnamon bug | Adult | ||
| Termits | Termits | Adult (winged, queen) | |
| Locust | Adult | ||
| Honey bee | Adult | ||
| Pentatomid bug | Adult | ||
| Thailand | Weaver ant | Adult | |
| Walker’s cicada | Adult | ||
| Ground cricket | Adult | ||
| Short tailed cricket | Adult | ||
| Giant water bug | Adult | ||
| Silkworm | Pupae | ||
| June beetle | Adult | ||
| Bamboo caterpillar | Larvae | ||
Sources: Chakravorty (2014), DeFoliart (1999), Feng et al. (2018), Pemberton (1994), Raheem et al. (2018).
Most consumed insects as food resources traditionally in Oceania
| Country | Scientific and common name of consumed insects | Consumed type | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Papua New Guinea | Sago grub | Larvae | |
| Locusts | Adult | ||
| Crickets | Adult | ||
| Mantis | Adult | ||
| Australia | Cossidae | Larvae | |
| Noctuidae | Larvae | ||
| Cerambycide | Larvae | ||
| Bees | Adult, honey | ||
Sources: Macfarlane (1978), Mercer (1993), Meyer-Rochow and Changkija (1997).
Most consumed insects as food resources traditionally in Africa
| Country | Scientific and common name of consumed insects | Consumed type | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nigeria | Termite | Adult | |
| Termite | Adult | ||
| Locust | Adult | ||
| Stinkbug | Adult | ||
| Reticulate bagnet | Larvae | ||
| Pallid emperor moth | Larvae | ||
| African silkworm | Larvae | ||
| Palm beetle | Larvae | ||
| Palm weevil | Larvae | ||
| Stem girdler | Larvae | ||
| Rhinoceros beetle | Larvae | ||
| Rhinoceros beetle | Larvae | ||
| Dung beetle | Larvae | ||
| Yam beetle | Larvae | ||
| Honey bee | Egg, larvae, pupa, honey | ||
| Giant African cricket | Adult | ||
| Cricket | Adult | ||
| Short horned grasshopper | Adult | ||
| Grasshopper | Adult | ||
| Mole cricket | Adult | ||
| Uganda | Termites | Adult | |
| Grasshopper | Adult | ||
| Lake fly | Adult | ||
| Grasshopper | Adult | ||
| Congo | Rhinoceros beetle | Larvae | |
| Silkmoth | Larvae | ||
| Termites | Adult | ||
| Bees | Egg, larvae, pupa, honey | ||
| Kenya | Winged termite | Adult | |
| Winged termite | Adult | ||
| Winged termite | Adult | ||
| Winged termite | Adult | ||
| Black ant | Adult | ||
| Grasshopper | Adult | ||
Sources: DeFoliart (1999), Mutungi et al. (2019), Raheem et al. (2018).
Most consumed insects as food resources traditionally in America
| Country | Scientific and common name of consumed insects | Consumed type | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mexico | Palm weevil | Larvae | |
| Grasshopper | Adult | ||
| Grasshopper | Adult | ||
| Stink bug | Adult | ||
| Ant | Larvae, pupae | ||
| Ant | Larvae, pupae | ||
| Colombia | Grasshopper | Adult | |
| Grasshopper | Adult | ||
| Beetles | Larvae | ||
| Beetles | Larvae | ||
| Dobsonfly | Larvae | ||
| Ant | Adult | ||
| Potter wasps | Larvae | ||
| Wasps | Egg, larvae | ||
| Bee | Honey | ||
| Bee | Honey | ||
Sources: DeFoliart (1999), Ramos‐Elorduy (1997), Ruddle (1973).
Fig. 1.Patent application trend by edible insect technology year.
Bars indicate the number of patent application each year, and a dotted line indicate the cumulative count of patent application.
Fig. 2.Technology growth stage of edible insect patent application.