In a world where 1 billion people suffer from hunger, lands and seas are overexploited and production systems are unsustainable, and there is an urgent need to find alternative foods. In this context, insects represent a good source of macro- and micronutrients and even bioactive compounds that could contribute to reducing nutritional deficiency and preventing some human diseases. However, some aspects related to their consumption, including health risks, need to be clarified. This communication aims to summarize the nutritional/phytochemical profile of common edible insects and the main safety concerns, highlighting the possible strategies to promote entomophagy in a more conscious way
Scope and approach The purpose of this research was to give an overview on several aspects of edibl...
The global increase in demand for animal livestock and insufficient access to land culminated in the...
The consumption of insects “entomophagy” or insect-based foods is increasingly being recognised as a...
In a world where 1 billion people suffer from hunger, lands and seas are overexploited and productio...
Insect eating has been reported for a long time, and they are consumed in raw and processed forms by...
Over the last decade, the urgency to find alternative and sustainable protein sources has prompted a...
Globally, there is a need to seek alternative sources of protein in addition to meat. This has led t...
Globally, there is a need to seek alternative sources of protein in addition to meat. This has led t...
Increasing world population worsens the serious problem of food security in developing countries. On...
Edible insects are important natural protein resource that can contribute to resilient food security...
The interest in insects as human food in the Western world is increasingly considered as a viable al...
Edible insects are becoming a key to solve the world’s food and feed security responding to an incr...
For thousands of years, edible insects have been used as food to alleviate hunger and improve malnut...
The global increase in demand for meat and the limited land area available prompt the search for alt...
Because of growing demand for meat and declining availability of agricultural land, there is an urge...
Scope and approach The purpose of this research was to give an overview on several aspects of edibl...
The global increase in demand for animal livestock and insufficient access to land culminated in the...
The consumption of insects “entomophagy” or insect-based foods is increasingly being recognised as a...
In a world where 1 billion people suffer from hunger, lands and seas are overexploited and productio...
Insect eating has been reported for a long time, and they are consumed in raw and processed forms by...
Over the last decade, the urgency to find alternative and sustainable protein sources has prompted a...
Globally, there is a need to seek alternative sources of protein in addition to meat. This has led t...
Globally, there is a need to seek alternative sources of protein in addition to meat. This has led t...
Increasing world population worsens the serious problem of food security in developing countries. On...
Edible insects are important natural protein resource that can contribute to resilient food security...
The interest in insects as human food in the Western world is increasingly considered as a viable al...
Edible insects are becoming a key to solve the world’s food and feed security responding to an incr...
For thousands of years, edible insects have been used as food to alleviate hunger and improve malnut...
The global increase in demand for meat and the limited land area available prompt the search for alt...
Because of growing demand for meat and declining availability of agricultural land, there is an urge...
Scope and approach The purpose of this research was to give an overview on several aspects of edibl...
The global increase in demand for animal livestock and insufficient access to land culminated in the...
The consumption of insects “entomophagy” or insect-based foods is increasingly being recognised as a...