this post was submitted on 05 Oct 2024
27 points (74.5% liked)
Public Health
360 readers
3 users here now
For issues concerning:
- Public Health
- Global Health
- Health Systems & Policy
- Environmental Health
- Epidemiology
- etc.
🩺 This community has a broader scope so please feel free to discuss. When it may not be clear, leave a comment talking about why something is important.
Related Communities
- Medical Community Hub
- Medicine
- Medicine Canada
- Premed
- Premed Canada
- Public Health (📍)
See the pinned post in the Medical Community Hub for links and descriptions. link ([email protected])
Rules
Given the inherent intersection that these topics have with politics, we encourage thoughtful discussions while also adhering to the mander.xyz instance guidelines.
Try to focus on the scientific aspects and refrain from making overly partisan or inflammatory content
Our aim is to foster a respectful environment where we can delve into the scientific foundations of these topics. Thank you!
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I’ve lived in roach infested regions and encountered many. But never smelled them. Are you holding them up to your nose? I’m not sure I ever got closer than ~50cm from one. I wonder if you have an extra sensitive olfactory sense.
In any case, the odor could be a defense mechanism perhaps sucreted and maybe not in the milk. The smell of fish is off putting to me but I can eat a fresh prepared white fish because the odor of the meat is fine.
Roach farming, like any insect farming, keeps the bugs in containers. That keeps the smell concentrated.
I do have a fairly acute sense of smell, but at the time I was looking into roach farming, I was still smoking, so my nose was much weaker. The guy that had the "farm" could smell it though, and so could his wife and kids, which is one of the reasons why the farm was in an outbuilding of its own.
There's kind of a "critical mass" with insect smells. Like ants, they have a strong odor if you get a few hundred together in one place, but you won't notice it until then. Mealworms, you can smell when there's a few dozen in a container, crickets don't even need that many if they're in a container for a while. Worms, like red wigglers, their smell is mostly covered up by being in soil, but if you're switching containers for some reason, you get a double handful or so, and it starts to be detectable (it's a kind of meaty smell, with a bit of petrichor like note).
In containers, there's also the waste that contributes to the overall smell, though you should really be cleaning often enough it's minor.
Afaik, the scent roaches have is a combination of pheromones and a little bit of that chitin smell that all insects have. It's there even with perfectly clean bedding in a new container for transport, though definitely milder.
Up close, like in a container for sale, it's barely noticeable to my nose. Faint enough that I kinda thought it might just be my imagination or some carryover. But I could still smell it later on. Never held an individual roach close to my nose, though.