A single cow can feed several people, but it takes a ton of bugs to feed one person. The number of bugs needed drastically increases the chances of one of those bugs having a disease that taints the entire thing.
That's an extremely poor comparison.
1 cow if infected can and will have thousands if not millions of parasites/bacterium/viral loads because of the increased mass present.
The size comparison actually works in favour of entomophagy because it can take weeks at most to raise a batch of grasshoppers from egg to full grown adult when compared to cattle that have much longer gestation periods and growth times to reach market value. That increase in time required to reach market value works against arguing diseases in small turnover projects because diseases "want" more time in order to infect more hosts.
How many will you need to raise to feed one person? How many bugs will be needed to feed many people? Then the most important question, how do you deal with the fact that bugs are a terrible source of nutrients?
1 cow if infected can and will have thousands if not millions of parasites/bacterium/viral loads because of the increased mass present.
That's one hell of an emotional response. You're also completely ignoring the fact that a single tainted bug can effectively poison what ever batch it's put into. A single diseased cow can also be easily identified, and then separated from the herd and put down.
That's an extremely poor comparison.
1 cow if infected can and will have thousands if not millions of parasites/bacterium/viral loads because of the increased mass present. The size comparison actually works in favour of entomophagy because it can take weeks at most to raise a batch of grasshoppers from egg to full grown adult when compared to cattle that have much longer gestation periods and growth times to reach market value. That increase in time required to reach market value works against arguing diseases in small turnover projects because diseases "want" more time in order to infect more hosts.
How many will you need to raise to feed one person? How many bugs will be needed to feed many people? Then the most important question, how do you deal with the fact that bugs are a terrible source of nutrients?
That's one hell of an emotional response. You're also completely ignoring the fact that a single tainted bug can effectively poison what ever batch it's put into. A single diseased cow can also be easily identified, and then separated from the herd and put down.