Insects have played an important role as human food throughout history,
especially in Africa, Asia and Latin America. A good example of edible insects
is the mealworm, Tenebrio molitor Linnaeus, 1758 (Coleoptera,
Tenebrionidae), which are eaten in Africa, Asia, the Americas and Australia.
This species is easily bred in captivity, requiring simple management. The
bocaiuva (Acrocomia aculeata (Jacq.) Lodd) is an abundant palm
tree found in the Brazilian Cerrado, providing fruits with high nutritional
value. The aim of this work was to determine the chemical composition of
T. molitor grown in different artificial
diets with bocaiuva pulp flour. The nutritional composition, fatty acid
composition, antioxidant activity, trypsin activity and anti-nutritional factors
of larvae were analyzed. The results showed that mealworms grown on artificial
diet with bocaiuva are a good source of protein (44.83%) and lipid (40.45%),
with significant levels of unsaturated fatty acids (65.99%), antioxidant
activity (4.5 μM Trolox/g of oil extracted from larvae) and absence of
anti-nutritional factors. This study indicates a new source of biomass for
growing mealworms and shows that it is possible to breed mealworms in artificial
diet with bocaiuva flour without compromising the nutritional quality of the
larvae.
Insect consumption as food is culturally practiced in various regions of the world. In Brazil, there are more than 130 species of edible insects registered, from nine orders, among which stands out the Coleoptera. The larva of the beetle Pachymerus nucleorum Fabricius, 1792, grows into the bocaiuva fruit (Acrocomia aculeata (Jacq.) Lodd. Ex Mart., 1845), which has proven nutritional quality. The aim of this work was to evaluate the nutritional potential of P. nucleorum larvae compared to bocaiuva kernels for human consumption. Proteins were the second largest portion of the larvae nutritional composition (33.13%), with percentage higher than the bocaiuva kernels (14.21%). The larval lipid content (37.87%) was also high, very close to the kernels (44.96%). The fraction corresponding to fatty acids in the oil extracted from the larvae was 40.17% for the saturated and 46.52% for the unsaturated. The antioxidant activity value was 24.3 uM trolox/g of oil extracted from larvae. The larvae tryptic activity was 0.032±0.006 nmol BAPNA/min. Both the larvae and the bocaiuva kernel presented absence of anti-nutritional factors. These results favor the use of P. nucleorum larvae as food, which are a great protein and lipid sources with considerable concentrations of unsaturated fatty acids compared to the bocaiuva kernel.
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