Western dislike of eating insects may be linked to ancient geography, genetics, and long-term diet patterns, not just culture ...
IFLScience on MSN
Neanderthals ate maggots and mosquitoes, but prehistoric European humans couldn’t stomach bugs
Insects may be full of protein, but they weren’t on the menu for prehistoric hunter-gatherers in Europe or Central Asia. Even ...
Bugs! It's what's for dinner. At least that's the pitch that the University of Minnesota Entomology Department will be making at an event this Saturday, the Great Minnsect Show, that will give the ...
PRINCETON, New Jersey -- Would you eat a cicada? Some high school students in Princeton, New Jersey are using the Brood X cicada emergence to spread the word about the benefits of eating insects. The ...
The United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization wants to be clear about its new report released today. “We are not saying that people should be eating bugs,” said Eva Muller, Director of FAO’s ...
MSN on MSN
Would you eat bugs?
In this video I eat a scorpion and some super bugs and crickets. Then I talk about why people should eat more bugs.
Insects live in nearly every habitat, and it’s estimated that there are currently 10 quintillion insects on the globe. So far ...
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