Research Progress and Production Status of Edible Insects as Food in China
Boxuan Xie, Yuxuan Zhu, Xiaoyi Chu, Sabin Saurav Pokharel, Lei Qian, Fajun Chen

TL;DR
This paper reviews the current state and potential of using edible insects as a sustainable food source in China, highlighting their nutritional value and challenges in production.
Contribution
The paper provides a comprehensive overview of the research progress, production status, and challenges of edible insects in China, emphasizing their medicinal and nutritional potential.
Findings
Edible insects are a high-nutrition alternative to traditional animal protein sources.
China faces challenges in artificial rearing and lacks specific legislation for edible insect production.
Edible insects have medicinal values and potential for industrial development.
Abstract
Based on the background of the exacerbating food shortage in the world, it is particularly important to diversify food resources in every possible direction. Among the choices available, edible insects have become an important alternative source of animal food with their high nutritional and functional (pharmacological) values, partially replacing normally consumed animal and livestock protein food sources. The utilization of edible insects has been an ancient custom since the dawn of civilization, attributed to their rich nutrition, alternate protein source, medicinal values, and presence of diverse secondary metabolites and alkaloids. This review provides an introduction to three key aspects of edible insects as food: freshness, long-term preservation, and medicinal value. It also provides details on the food source and products of edible insect species, their detailed nutritional…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHistorical and Literary Analyses
