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  2. Entomophagy in humans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entomophagy_in_humans

    Eighty percent of the world's nations eat insects of 1,000 to 2,000 species. [6] [7] FAO has registered some 1,900 edible insect species and estimates that there were, in 2005, around two billion insect consumers worldwide. FAO suggests eating insects as a possible solution to environmental degradation caused by livestock production. [8]

  3. Entomophagy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entomophagy

    Entomophagy is scientifically described as widespread among non-human primates and common among many human communities. [3] The scientific term describing the practice of eating insects by humans is anthropo-entomophagy. [7] The eggs, larvae, pupae, and adults of certain insects have been eaten by humans from prehistoric times to the present ...

  4. Gongylonema pulchrum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gongylonema_pulchrum

    Transmission to humans is due mostly to unsanitary conditions and the ingestion of infected coprophagous insects, mostly dung beetles and cockroaches. Beyond direct ingestion of infected intermediate hosts (insects), foods can become contaminated if unsanitary conditions pervade in the production of the food- coprophagous insects are found in ...

  5. Bad news: Bed bugs like the smell of your dirty laundry - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2017-09-29-bad-news-bed-bugs...

    See, these scientists had a theory: it’s not just humans that bed bugs are attracted to, it’s the smell of a human. Bed bugs, along with mosquitoes and ticks and plenty of other blood-sucking ...

  6. List of common household pests - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_common_household_pests

    The house fly is found all over the world where humans live and so is the most widely distributed insect. [1]This is a list of common household pests – undesired animals that have a history of living, invading, causing damage, eating human foods, acting as disease vectors or causing other harms in human habitation.

  7. Still finding stink bugs this winter? An insect ecologist ...

    www.aol.com/still-finding-stink-bugs-winter...

    The invasive species originally came from Asia and arrived on the U.S. east coast in the ‘90s. This is how they arrived in WA state by 2010.

  8. Spiders could theoretically eat every human on earth in one year

    www.aol.com/news/2017-03-28-spiders-could...

    The amount of "meat" is equivalent to that of all 7 billion humans on the planet combined. Spiders could, theoretically, eat every single human on earth within one year. It gets worse.

  9. Trombiculidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trombiculidae

    Trombiculidae (/ t r ɒ m b ɪ ˈ k juː l ɪ d iː /), commonly referred to in North America as chiggers and in Britain as harvest mites, but also known as berry bugs, bush-mites, red bugs or scrub-itch mites, are a family of mites. [3] Chiggers are often confused with jiggers – a type of flea.