1. Self-selection of food ingredients and agricultural by-products by the house cricket, Acheta domesticus (Orthoptera: Gryllidae): A holistic approach to develop optimized diets.
- Author
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Morales-Ramos JA, Rojas MG, Dossey AT, and Berhow M
- Subjects
- Agriculture, Animal Nutrition Sciences, Animals, Animal Feed economics, Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena physiology, Food Ingredients economics, Gryllidae physiology
- Abstract
The house cricket, Acheta domesticus L. (Orthoptera: Gryllidae) is one of the most important species of industrialized insects in the United States. Within the past five years the market of cricket powder as a food ingredient has been growing with increasing consumer interest on more sustainable sources of food. However, high labor costs of cricket production and high prices of cricket feed formulations result in cricket powder market prices much higher than other protein-rich food ingredients, making cricket powder only competitive within the novelty food market. In this study new diets formulated using by-products were developed using dietary self-selection followed by regression analysis. Crickets selected among seven different combinations of ingredients. Consumption ratios of food ingredients and by-products were used to determine macro and micro-nutrient intake. Regression analysis was used to determine the individual nutrient intake effect on cricket biomass production. Intake of vitamin C, sterol, manganese, and vitamins B1 and B5 had the most significant impact on live biomass production. Four diets were formulated based on this information and compared with a reference (Patton's 13) and a commercial diet. Although, crickets reared on Patton's diet 13 produced the most dry-weight biomass and developed the fastest, diet 4 (consisting of 92% by-products) generated the most profit (with a cost of $0.39 USD per kg) after an economic analysis that did not include the commercial formulation. Dry-weight biomass production was not significantly different among the four new diets and the commercial diet. This study demonstrated the value of dietary self-selection studies in developing oligidic insect diets and in studies of insect nutrition. This is the first such study involving farmed edible crickets and agricultural by-products. Four new cricket diet formulations contain between 62 and 92% agricultural by-products are included., Competing Interests: I have read the journal's policy and the authors of this manuscript have the following competing interests: The author Aaron T. Dossey as the owner of All Things Bugs LLC is planning to commercialize cricket feeds formulated based on this study, however formulations for commercialization are different than the ones reported in this manuscript. Plans of All Things Bugs to commercialize diets using this study do not alter our adherence to PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials.
- Published
- 2020
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