Title
Edible Insects and Other Chitin-Bearing Foods in Ethnic Peru: Accessibility, Nutritional Acceptance, and Food-Security Implications
Date Issued
01 September 2018
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
review
Author(s)
Manno N.
Schwarzinger C.
List M.
Schoefberger W.
Battisti A.
Paoletti M.G.
Publisher(s)
Society of Ethnobiology
Abstract
This study concerns the ecological and economic features of a particular category of complementary foods in ethnic Peru-comprising of insects, crustaceans, snails, and mushrooms- grouped as chitin-bearing foods (CBFs). Data collection was through participatory methods and semistructured interviews with 242 individuals in eight communities/villages from four ethnic populations. We found that, in Peruvian Amazonian Amerindian communities, CBFs are the most relevant protein source during the rainy season. Shrimp (Macrobrachium sp.), crab (Hypolobocera peruviana), palmweevil (Rhynchophorus palmarum), leaf-cutter ants (Atta cephalotes), and Lepidoptera larvae are common in the Amazonian diet. In Awajún and Ashaninka communities, most interviewed subjects declared significant consumption of CBFs, while a low percentage ate vertebrates every week during the rainy season and even in the dry season. In contrast, highland Quechua people occasionally consume larvae of Lepidoptera and Coleoptera and Quechua-Lamas populations (in the Amazonian region from historical times) consume the most accessible CBFs on a weekly basis. Traditional technologies and methods of semi-cultivation are evidence of a growing economic interest for CBFs. Relevant species have a high nutritional value in terms of chitin, fatty acids, and proteins, as well a high acceptance by the indigenous population. We conclude that Amazonian Amerindians manage these foods not only as a remedy for food shortage during the rainy season, but also as a stable forest resource and year-round agricultural by-product. We conclude that these traditional food practices should be incorporated within local and national agri-food policies to develop their economic potential and bring their social benefits into rural and peri-urban areas of Peru.
Start page
424
End page
447
Volume
38
Issue
3
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Acuicultura
Etnología
Nutrición, Dietética
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85054162853
Source
Journal of Ethnobiology
ISSN of the container
02780771
Sponsor(s)
uasb”). Missions of N.M. to Ashaninka communities in the Bosque de Protección San Matias y San Carlos (Pasco Region), has been partially supported by Instituto del Bien Comun NGO. We are grateful for the taxonomic determination of edible CBFs by the following scientists: Charles W. O’Brien (Green Valley, Arizona), John Lattke (Universidad Central de Venezuela, Maracay), James M. Carpenter (American Museum of Natural History, New York), and Andreas O. Angulo (Universidad de Concepcion, Chile). Finally, we are thankful to prof. F. H. Falcone (University of Nottingham) and M. Manno (Università Federico II di Napoli) for their comments.
We hereby declare that none of the authors of this study have conflicts of interest concerning the information contained in the present paper. This work was funded in part by the University of Padua (grant 2010-C91J10000320001) and the Veneto Region (Decentralized Cooperation Fund, 2011-2012). The NMR spectrometers of J. Kepler University (resp. W. Schoefberger) were acquired in collaboration with the University of South Bohemia (CZ) with the financial support of the European Union through the EFRE INTERREG IV ETC-AT-CZ programme (Project M00146, “RERI-
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus