132
views
0
recommends
+1 Recommend
1 collections
    0
    shares
      • Record: found
      • Abstract: found
      • Article: found

      ‘Entomophagy’: an evolving terminology in need of review

      review-article

      Read this article at

      ScienceOpenPublisher
      Bookmark
          There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.

          Abstract

          There is growing interest in insects as human food in academia, food and agricultural industries, public institutions and the public at large. Yet many of the words and concepts used to describe these organisms and the human practices surrounding them are still rudimentary, compared to the diversity of the organisms themselves and the existing complexity and rapid evolution of the practices they aim to describe. The goals of this paper are to: (1) show how the roots of the term ‘entomophagy’ and its uses have evolved over time; (2) illustrate some of the term’s problems that necessitate its review; and (3) offer recommendations for use of the term in future research and other practice. Our paper offers a brief historical review of insect eating as described by certain Western cultural sources, explores some of the taxonomic ambiguities and challenges surrounding the category ‘insects’, and ultimately argues for more precise and contextual terminology in this both richly traditional and rapidly developing field.

          Most cited references107

          • Record: found
          • Abstract: found
          • Article: not found

          Phylogenomics resolves the timing and pattern of insect evolution.

          Insects are the most speciose group of animals, but the phylogenetic relationships of many major lineages remain unresolved. We inferred the phylogeny of insects from 1478 protein-coding genes. Phylogenomic analyses of nucleotide and amino acid sequences, with site-specific nucleotide or domain-specific amino acid substitution models, produced statistically robust and congruent results resolving previously controversial phylogenetic relations hips. We dated the origin of insects to the Early Ordovician [~479 million years ago (Ma)], of insect flight to the Early Devonian (~406 Ma), of major extant lineages to the Mississippian (~345 Ma), and the major diversification of holometabolous insects to the Early Cretaceous. Our phylogenomic study provides a comprehensive reliable scaffold for future comparative analyses of evolutionary innovations among insects. Copyright © 2014, American Association for the Advancement of Science.
            Bookmark
            • Record: found
            • Abstract: found
            • Article: not found

            Low host specificity of herbivorous insects in a tropical forest.

            Two decades of research have not established whether tropical insect herbivores are dominated by specialists or generalists. This impedes our understanding of species coexistence in diverse rainforest communities. Host specificity and species richness of tropical insects are also key parameters in mapping global patterns of biodiversity. Here we analyse data for over 900 herbivorous species feeding on 51 plant species in New Guinea and show that most herbivorous species feed on several closely related plant species. Because species-rich genera are dominant in tropical floras, monophagous herbivores are probably rare in tropical forests. Furthermore, even between phylogenetically distant hosts, herbivore communities typically shared a third of their species. These results do not support the classical view that the coexistence of herbivorous species in the tropics is a consequence of finely divided plant resources; non-equilibrium models of tropical diversity should instead be considered. Low host specificity of tropical herbivores reduces global estimates of arthropod diversity from 31 million (ref. 1) to 4 6 million species. This finding agrees with estimates based on taxonomic collections, reconciling an order of magnitude discrepancy between extrapolations of global diversity based on ecological samples of tropical communities with those based on sampling regional faunas.
              Bookmark
              • Record: found
              • Abstract: not found
              • Article: not found

              A perspective on disgust.

                Bookmark

                Author and article information

                Journal
                jiff
                Journal of Insects as Food and Feed
                Wageningen Academic Publishers
                2352-4588
                7 December 2015
                : 1
                : 4
                : 293-305
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ] Nordic Food Lab, University of Copenhagen, Department of Food Science, Rolighedsvej 30, 1958 Frederiksberg C, Copenhagen, Denmark
                [ 2 ] University of Copenhagen, Department of Food and Resource Economics, Rolighedsvej 25, 1958 Frederiksberg C, Denmark
                [ 3 ] University of Copenhagen, Department of Nutrition, Exercise and Sports, Rolighedsvej 26, 1958 Frederiksberg C, Denmark
                [ 4 ] University of Copenhagen, Department of Plant and Environmental Sciences, Thorvaldsensvej 40, 1871 Frederiksberg C, Denmark
                [ 5 ] Research Institute of Luminous Organisms, Hachijojima, Tokyo 100-1623, Japan
                [ 6 ] Department of Biology, Oulu University, Oulu, Finland
                [ 7 ] Stenderupgade 5, 1738 Copenhagen V, Denmark
                [ 8 ] University of Oxford, British Heart Foundation Centre on Population Approaches for Non-Communicable Disease Prevention, Nuffield Department of Population Health, Old Road Campus, Roosevelt Drive, Oxford, OX3 7LF, United Kingdom
                [ 9 ] University of Pennsylvania, Department of Psychology, Solomon Labs, 3720 Walnut St, Room B15, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6241, USA
                [ 10 ] Wageningen University, Food Quality and Design, P.O. Box 17, 6700 AA Wageningen, the Netherlands
                [ 11 ] Wageningen University, Laboratory of Entomology, Building 107, P.O. Box 8031, 6700 EH Wageningen, the Netherlands
                [ 12 ] Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations, Forest Economic, Policy and Products Division, Forestry Department, Vialle delle Terme do Caracalla, 00100 Rome, Italy
                Author notes
                Article
                10.3920/JIFF2015.0074
                c23114c8-a063-4155-b16c-2b31cdd4f1c0
                © 2015 Wageningen Academic Publishers

                History
                : 31 July 2015
                : 27 October 2015
                Categories
                REVIEW ARTICLE

                Animal agriculture,General life sciences,Nutrition & Dietetics,Animal science & Zoology,Life sciences
                food systems,biodiversity,taxonomy,edible insects,othering

                Comments

                Comment on this article