PLoS One Study Backs 10-12 Week Superworms for Skeleton Cleaning as Beetle Infestation Risk Persists
Updated
Updated · Ars Technica · Jul 1
PLoS One Study Backs 10-12 Week Superworms for Skeleton Cleaning as Beetle Infestation Risk Persists
3 articles · Updated · Ars Technica · Jul 1
Summary
Superworm larvae cleaned donated animal remains in a PLoS One study, positioning the common pet-food insect as a practical option for preparing skeletal specimens.
The researchers argue the method could avoid key drawbacks of burial, chemicals, enzymes and boiling, while matching the soft-tissue removal benefits that made dermestid beetles the museum standard.
10-12 week larval superworms are easier to contain than beetle colonies because only the larval stage is needed, and the insects do not pupate in crowded conditions—reducing escape and infestation risks.
The team tested the approach on eight specimens, from a house mouse and little bittern to a gray wolf, and used a marbled polecat skeleton cleaned by boiling as a conventional comparison.