
Crickets are 60-70% protein by dry weight — and cricket farming uses 2,000x less water and 12x less feed per kg of edible protein than beef.

Crickets are 60-70% protein by dry weight — and cricket farming uses 2,000x less water and 12x less feed per kg of edible protein than beef.

Atlas moth caterpillars spin a brown wool-like silk called fagara — durable enough to be harvested commercially in parts of India.

Households across West Africa welcome driver-ant raids — they evacuate for the afternoon and return to homes cleared of every cockroach, rat, and snake.

Australia imported African dung beetles in the 1960s — native fauna couldn't process European cattle dung, so the country flew in beetles that could.

Firefly luciferase is one of the most-used reporter enzymes in molecular biology — almost every gene-expression lab on Earth has used it.

Honey bees pollinate roughly one-third of the food crops humans eat — a service valued at US$200–400 billion per year globally.

A single seven-spotted ladybug eats around 5,000 aphids in its lifetime.