Worth a try.
Seriously
Deep-fried insects at a food stall in Bangkok, Thailand. More than 2 billion people around the world regularly consume insects. PHOTO: TAKORADEE/CC BY S-A 3.0 |
“I was on a trip with my parents in
Central America and we were served fried ants,” she says.
“I remember being so grossed out initially, but when I put the ant in my mouth, I was really surprised because it tasted like food — and it was good!”
“I remember being so grossed out initially, but when I put the ant in my mouth, I was really surprised because it tasted like food — and it was good!”
Today, Stull,
a recent doctoral graduate of the University of Wisconsin–Madison Nelson
Institute for Environmental Studies, is the lead author of a new pilot clinical
trial published in the journal Scientific
Reports that looks at what eating crickets does to the human
microbiome.
It shows that consuming crickets can
help support the growth of beneficial gut bacteria and that eating crickets is
not only safe at high doses but may also reduce inflammation in the body.
“There is a lot of interest right
now in edible insects,” Stull says. “It’s gaining traction in Europe and in the
U.S. as a sustainable, environmentally friendly protein source compared to
traditional livestock.”
More than 2 billion people around
the world regularly consume insects, which are also a good source of protein,
vitamins, minerals and healthy fats. The research team was interested in
documenting for the first time via clinical trial the health effects of eating
them.
“This study is important because insects represent a novel component in Western diets and their health effects in human populations haven’t really been studied,” says co-corresponding author Tiffany Weir, a professor of food science and human nutrition at Colorado State University.
“With what we now know about the gut
microbiota and its relationship to human health, it’s important to establish
how a novel food might affect gut microbial populations. We found that cricket
consumption may actually offer benefits beyond nutrition.”
Raising insects for protein not only
helps protect the environment, but also offers a more healthful option than
meat in many wealthy countries with high-meat diets, says co-author Jonathan Patz, director of
the UW–Madison Global Health Institute, where Stull will begin a postdoctoral
research position in the fall.
Crickets, like other insects,
contain fibers, such as chitin, that are different from the dietary fiber found
in foods like fruits and vegetables. Fiber serves as a microbial food source
and some fiber types promote the growth of beneficial bacteria, also known as
probiotics. The small trial probed whether insect fibers might influence the
bacteria found in the gastrointestinal tract.
For two weeks, 20 healthy men and
women between the ages of 18 and 48 ate either a control breakfast or a
breakfast containing 25 grams of powdered cricket meal made into muffins and
shakes.
Each participant then ate a normal
diet for a two-week “washout period.” For the following two weeks, those who
started on the cricket diet consumed a control breakfast and those who started
on the control diet consumed a cricket breakfast.
Graduate students Rachel Bergmans, left, and Valerie Stull make a nutritious shake using roasted and ground insects in 2015. PHOTO: JEFF MILLER |
Every participant served as their
own control for the study and the researchers were blinded with respect to
which diet each participant was on at any given time.
The researchers collected blood
samples, stool samples and answers to gastrointestinal questionnaires
immediately before the study began, immediately following the first two-week
diet period and immediately after the second two-week diet period.
Participants’ blood samples were
tested for a host of health measures, like blood glucose and enzymes associated
with liver function, and also for levels of a protein associated with
inflammation.
The fecal samples were tested for
the byproducts of microbial metabolism in the human gut, inflammatory chemicals
associated with the gastrointestinal tract, and the overall makeup of the
microbial communities present in the stools.
Participants reported no significant
gastrointestinal changes or side effects and the researchers found no evidence
of changes to overall microbial composition or changes to gut inflammation.
They did see an increase in a metabolic enzyme associated with gut health, and
a decrease in an inflammatory protein in the blood called TNF-alpha, which has
been linked to other measures of well-being, like depression and cancer.
Additionally, the team saw an
increase in the abundance of beneficial gut bacteria like Bifidobacterium
animalis, a strain that has been linked to improved gastrointestinal
function and other measures of health in studies of a commercially available
strain called BB-12.
But, the researchers say, more and
larger studies are needed to replicate these findings and determine what
components of crickets may contribute to improved gut health.
“This very small study shows that
this is something worth looking at in the future when promoting insects as a
sustainable food source,” says Stull.
Stull is co-founder of an award-winning startup
and research collaboration called MIGHTi,
the Mission to Improve Global Health Through Insects.
In the future, MIGHTi hopes to
provide home-use insect-farming kits to communities that already consume
insects, including many in southern Africa. Insects require far less water to
farm than traditional livestock and can help improve food security in
impoverished communities while providing economic opportunities to women.
“Most of the insects consumed around
the world are wild-harvested where they are and when they are available,” says
Stull, who has eaten insects — including caterpillars, cicadas, grasshoppers
and beetle larvae — all over the world. “People love flying termites in Zambia,
which come out only once or twice a year and are really good; they taste like
popcorn and are a crunchy, oily snack.”
She hopes to promote insects as a
more mainstream food in the United States, and though the industry is currently
small, the rise of edible insect producers and companies using insects in their
food products may make this possible.
“Food is very tied to culture, and 20 or 30 years ago,
no one in the U.S. was eating sushi because we thought it was disgusting, but
now you can get it at a gas station in Nebra