“…Chitin is one of the most abundant amino polysaccharides found Q3 in nature next to cellulose; it has a wide variety of sources as exoskeleton of crustacean (crab, shrimp and crawfish, Oniscus asellus) [1][2][3][4], insect cuticles (Melolontha melolontha) [3], Orthoptera species [5,6], wings of cockroach [7], grasshopper species [8], medicinal fungus [9], larvae and adult Colorado potato beetle [10], aquatic invertebrates [11], bat guano [12], resting eggs of Daphnia longispina [13], spider species [14], Daphnia magna resting eggs [15], and cell wall of fungi and in the green algae. The chemical structure of chitin (C 8 H 13 O 5 N) n is similar to cellulose, having one hydroxyl group on each monomer substituted with an acetyl amine groups.…”