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Mahdy Mahdy 🇮🇩
Mahdy Mahdy 🇮🇩
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Monday 11 November 2024 11:20:44 GMT
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Scientists have confirmed what sounds like a bizarre headline but is actually real research: the milk produced by a specific species of c0ckroach is nutritionally far richer than cow milk, containing nearly four times the protein, fat, and sugar content per equivalent serving. The finding comes from a study on the Pacific beetle c0ckroach, one of the only known insects that gives birth to live young and nurses them with a nutrient-dense liquid secreted from its gut. When researchers analyzed the crystallized form of this substance, they found it to be one of the most calorie-dense foods ever documented in nature. Scientists have been exploring whether it could eventually be replicated in a lab setting and used as a high-efficiency food supplement, particularly for populations dealing with malnutrition. Supporters in the scientific community argue this discovery opens a genuinely useful door in the search for sustainable protein sources. With global food demand rising and traditional livestock farming under increasing pressure for its environmental footprint, insect-derived nutrition could eventually offer a low-resource, high-yield alternative that does not require the land, water, or emissions that conventional dairy farming depends on. Critics, however, point out that scaling up any kind of insect-based food product faces enormous cultural and psychological barriers, and that consumers in most parts of the world are nowhere near ready to accept c0ckroach-derived anything on their grocery shelves. It is a reminder that the gap between a promising scientific discovery and something people will actually eat has always been as much about human psychology as it is about nutrition. #ScienceNews #FoodScience #FutureFood #Nutrition #Sustainability
Scientists have confirmed what sounds like a bizarre headline but is actually real research: the milk produced by a specific species of c0ckroach is nutritionally far richer than cow milk, containing nearly four times the protein, fat, and sugar content per equivalent serving. The finding comes from a study on the Pacific beetle c0ckroach, one of the only known insects that gives birth to live young and nurses them with a nutrient-dense liquid secreted from its gut. When researchers analyzed the crystallized form of this substance, they found it to be one of the most calorie-dense foods ever documented in nature. Scientists have been exploring whether it could eventually be replicated in a lab setting and used as a high-efficiency food supplement, particularly for populations dealing with malnutrition. Supporters in the scientific community argue this discovery opens a genuinely useful door in the search for sustainable protein sources. With global food demand rising and traditional livestock farming under increasing pressure for its environmental footprint, insect-derived nutrition could eventually offer a low-resource, high-yield alternative that does not require the land, water, or emissions that conventional dairy farming depends on. Critics, however, point out that scaling up any kind of insect-based food product faces enormous cultural and psychological barriers, and that consumers in most parts of the world are nowhere near ready to accept c0ckroach-derived anything on their grocery shelves. It is a reminder that the gap between a promising scientific discovery and something people will actually eat has always been as much about human psychology as it is about nutrition. #ScienceNews #FoodScience #FutureFood #Nutrition #Sustainability

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