Startup Mighty Cricket, which has developed consumer food products using protein sourced from crickets, has been awarded federal funds it plans to use to establish a local cricket farm. St.
Nathan Rubbelke, St. Louis Inno editor - St. Louis Business Journal May 28, 2023, 8:00am CDT Submitted to SLBJ Sarah Schlafly Startup Mighty Cricket, which has developed consumer food products using ...
Stella Maina speaks of cricket farming as she showcases some of the dried insects and products from the milled high nutrient food. The desire to diversify sources of nutrition and improve the ...
In the arid regions of Northern Kenya, where pastoralism has been a way of life for centuries, women are looking for alternative livelihoods. Faced with the devastating impacts of climate change, ...
Rosemary Nenini watched helplessly as her husband’s cattle perished daily during a drought that lasted from 2020 to 2022.
Dead or alive, crickets are in big demand these days. After Pat and Madeline Reviers' plan to raise crickets for high-protein, nutrient-packed cricket flour was temporarily stalled, they've pivoted to ...
AMES — The tiny crickets Shelby Smith raises for her company, Gym-N-Eat Crickets, aren’t going to solve the big problem of climate change. But to produce the same amount of protein, crickets take six ...
A herd of cows, a flock of sheep, a row of crops — all are recognizable farming terms, none of which apply to Joanna Newcomb's farming operation. That's because Newcomb raises crickets. For food.