Shocking new research suggests the 370 billion crickets farmed each year may actually feel pain

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令人震惊的新研究表明,每年养殖的 3700 亿只蟋蟀实际上可能会感到疼痛Proceedings of the Royal Society B Question the old notion that crickets are simple creatures that respond to stimuli like robots. The scientists noticed something interesting: Crickets seemed to take care of themselves by grooming only injured limbs and ignoring those that were intact. This suggests that the way they feel pain may be more complex than we previously thought. So there is now a discussion about whether these insects have some form of consciousness, which makes us think about how ethical it is to continue an industry without proper welfare legal guidance.

Research shows 370 billion humans Polygonum May feel pain

Researchers have found that house crickets (Acheta homeus) don’t just react to heat or injury and immediately flinch; They display “flexible self-preservation.” A study in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B points out that after being injured, crickets will repeatedly groom and protect the specific injured area. This behavior suggests that the insect’s nervous system is treating the injury as a lasting negative state rather than a brief reflex. This distinction is crucial in studies of animal perception because it suggests the existence of a sensory experience of pain.

Why Crickets’ Behavior Shows True Emotions

Nociception involves only the detection of noxious stimuli. Pain, on the other hand, is how we experience hurt emotionally. Research shows that crickets don’t just sense danger; Their protective actions vary depending on the situation. When scientists applied different thermal or mechanical pressures, the crickets showed a preference for protecting injured limbs. This behavior suggests brain responses similar to those of vertebrates. A study in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B notes that crickets appear to be able to process sensory details into complex internal states that resemble pain.

370 billion reasons to rethink animal welfare

According to the Journal of Insect Food & Feed, raising 370 billion crickets on farms each year can cause tremendous suffering. Currently, many farmers kill the insects by chopping, boiling or slowly freezing them because they believe crickets cannot feel pain. If crickets have the ability to feel pain, these methods could represent a significant animal welfare issue. As a result, research shows there is an urgent need for the industry to create humane methods of killing crickets and provide better living conditions. This approach should reflect standards applicable to farm animals such as cows and pigs to reduce suffering at scale.

Why invertebrates are being left behind

The discovery of insect pain created a huge regulatory vacuum. Most animal welfare laws around the world explicitly exclude invertebrates, leaving billions of sentient creatures without legal protection. Ethicists are now calling for a precautionary principle approach: if an animal is likely to suffer, we should act as if it did suffer. This could lead to new international standards for insect rearing, transport and killing, fundamentally changing the economics and operations of the global alternative protein market.

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