Vidakovic, Aleksandar
- Department of Applied Animal Science and Welfare, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Review article2023Peer reviewedOpen access
Pakseresht, Ashkan; Vidakovic, Aleksandar; Frewer, Lynn J.
Background: Research in recent years has shown there is high potential for various insect species to converting organic substrates into high-quality feedstuffs. Insect-derived meal is increasingly being used to replace conventional feedstuffs such as soybean and fishmeal in animal diets, due to its high protein and essential amino acid content. However, research on consumer acceptance of foods derived from animals produced using insect-based meal is fragmented.Scope and approach: A systematic literature review was carried out in Scopus, Web of Science, AgEcon, and Google Scholar, with a total of 28 articles meeting the selection criteria. Papers were reviewed to identify factors affecting consumer acceptance of insect-based feed.Key Findings and Conclusions: Overall, the review indicated that insects are more acceptable to consumers as an animal feedstuff than as human food. The most important factors influencing consumer evaluation of insect-based feed included risk perceptions, knowledge and heuristic cues. Ethical and environmental concerns also played a role in the decision-making process, but their effect on consumer acceptance of using insects in animal feed was less important. Food neophobia, disgust and uncertainties about safety and health, mainly deriving from lack of knowledge on the part of consumers, emerged as critical barriers to acceptance of insects in animal feed. Greater familiarity with the technology used for the production of insect meals could alleviate disgust and even lessen the impact of neophobia, although affective emotional reactions are unlikely to be changed by awareness and provision of information alone. Technological issues (including substrates and insect species) as well as price changes in the resulting animal-based foods are relevant factors that warrant further research in relation to consumer acceptance.
Entomophagy; Consumer attitude; Willingness-to-consume; Animal feed meal; Novel; Systematic review
Trends in Food Science and Technology
2023, Volume: 138, pages: 310-322 Publisher: ELSEVIER SCIENCE LONDON
SLUsystematic
SDG2 Zero hunger
Food Science
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tifs.2023.05.018
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/126393