Close Menu
  • Last News
    • Cities
    • Climate
    • Energy
    • Impact
    • Markets
    • Opinions
    • Policy
    • Reports
    • Research
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

News, investigations, and analysis — our top stories every morning to start your day right.

Trending
Illustration of Thorizon's molten salt reactor technology converting nuclear waste into clean energy. Image generated by AI.
“Nuclear Waste Becomes Power Goldmine”: European Firm to Generate 100 MW for 40 Years Using Radioactive Leftovers
Illustration of underwater concrete spheres used for solar energy storage. Image generated by AI.
Giant Underwater Concrete Spheres Are Quietly Revolutionizing Solar Energy Storage in the Most Unexpected Ocean Depths
Illustration of robotic centipedes navigating agricultural terrain. Image generated by AI.
These Creeping Vineyard Robots Use Insect-Like Legs to Annihilate Weeds With Ruthless Precision and Rock-Bottom Costs
Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn RSS
Sustainability Times
Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn RSS
Subscribe
  • Featured
  • Cities
    Illustration of the sinking urban landscape affecting major U.S. cities due to groundwater depletion (AI-generated, unrealistic). Credit: Ideogram.

    “America’s Cities Are Sinking Fast”: 28 Urban Giants Like New York and Houston Are Quietly Crumbling Beneath Our Feet

    May 13, 2025 at 7:00 AM

    Chinese Product Designer Yihan Luo Showcased “Pikapoo” at Milan Design Week 2025

    May 7, 2025 at 5:23 PM

    Winter Storms to Bring More Snow and Ice Across the U.S.

    February 8, 2025 at 10:50 AM

    A survey of a single backyard in Australia reveals over a thousand species

    December 10, 2023 at 10:55 PM

    Harms of noise pollution track with U.S. racial inequities

    December 5, 2023 at 8:50 PM
  • Climate
    Illustration of extreme heat conditions affecting regions like Death Valley, Jacobabad, and Basra. Image generated by AI.

    “Earth Is Boiling Over”: These 9 Scorching Hot Spots Are Blistering Proof Our Planet Is Heating Up Faster Than Ever Before

    May 17, 2025 at 6:54 AM
    Illustration of wildfire smoke impacting air quality and health. Image generated by AI.

    Wildfire Smoke Disaster: This Groundbreaking Study Links U.S. Blazes to 15,000 Deaths and an Economic Hit of $160 Billion

    May 15, 2025 at 9:48 AM
    Illustration of the challenges and complexities of plastic recycling (AI-generated, unrealistic). Credit: Ideogram.

    “Recycling Is a Lie”: New Reports Expose That Most Plastic Can’t Be Reused—and Even Recyclers Are Now Under Fire

    May 12, 2025 at 4:05 PM
    Illustration of billions of periodical cicadas emerging across the United States landscape (AI-generated, unrealistic). Credit: Ideogram.

    “Billions Are Coming”: US Prepares for Biblical Cicada Swarm Not Seen in 17 Years as Ground Begins to Tremble

    May 11, 2025 at 4:54 PM
    Illustration of the ancient Wollemi pine, also known as the "dinosaur tree," thriving in its natural habitat (AI-generated, unrealistic). Credit: Ideogram.

    “Jurassic Tree Lives Again”: 200-Million-Year-Old ‘Dinosaur Tree’ Successfully Bred in Stunning Scientific Breakthrough

    May 9, 2025 at 3:55 PM
  • Energy
    Illustration of Thorizon's molten salt reactor technology converting nuclear waste into clean energy. Image generated by AI.

    “Nuclear Waste Becomes Power Goldmine”: European Firm to Generate 100 MW for 40 Years Using Radioactive Leftovers

    May 20, 2025 at 10:10 AM
    Illustration of underwater concrete spheres used for solar energy storage. Image generated by AI.

    Giant Underwater Concrete Spheres Are Quietly Revolutionizing Solar Energy Storage in the Most Unexpected Ocean Depths

    May 20, 2025 at 9:12 AM
    Illustration of ZeroAvia's hydrogen-electric cargo plane taking off, showcasing sustainable aviation technology. Image generated by AI.

    World First Hydrogen-Electric Cargo Flights Set to Transform UK Aviation With Clean Airborne Logistics Starting This Year

    May 19, 2025 at 6:02 AM
    Illustration of a satellite beaming solar energy to Earth from space. Image generated by AI.

    “13 Times More Power From Space”: UK Company Achieves Historic Solar Breakthrough Beaming Massive Energy Back to Earth

    May 18, 2025 at 6:10 PM
    Illustration of a bottle-shaped nuclear fusion reactor design by Realta Fusion. Image generated by AI.

    “Fusion in a Bottle”: Realta’s Radical Reactor Design Could Finally Deliver Limitless Nuclear Power With Zero Carbon Emissions

    May 18, 2025 at 8:56 AM
  • Impact
    Illustration of robotic centipedes navigating agricultural terrain. Image generated by AI.

    These Creeping Vineyard Robots Use Insect-Like Legs to Annihilate Weeds With Ruthless Precision and Rock-Bottom Costs

    May 20, 2025 at 8:01 AM
    Illustration of the SG-1 Fathom autonomous underwater glider patrolling the ocean. Image generated by AI.

    German Firm Unleashes Underwater Spy Drone Swarm Capable of Operating Stealthily for 3 Months in a Game-Changing Maritime Shift

    May 19, 2025 at 4:46 PM
    Illustration of China's People’s Liberation Army Navy warship undergoing degaussing with AI integration. Image generated by AI.

    US Military Shocked as China Uses AI to Slash Warship Magnetic Signature by 60%, Rewriting Global Naval Power Dynamics

    May 19, 2025 at 9:56 AM
    Illustration of the MQ-9 Reaper drone equipped with small cruise missiles. Image generated by AI.

    “Drones Get Deadlier”: U.S. Equips MQ-9 Reapers With Cruise Missiles in Major Firepower Upgrade for Global Strike Dominance

    May 16, 2025 at 3:46 PM
    Illustration of using lemons for oven cleaning as a natural household hack (AI-generated, unrealistic). Credit: Ideogram.

    “This Oven Lemon Trick Is Pure Genius”: The Person Behind It Deserves an Award for Transforming Everyday Cleaning

    May 12, 2025 at 6:56 AM
  • Markets

    Most sources of protein in the US contain vast quantities of microplastics

    January 11, 2024 at 5:47 AM

    Banking on change: How your accounts have climate impact

    December 26, 2023 at 7:13 PM

    Sparxell’s glitter is golden with nature-based color, design

    December 19, 2023 at 9:29 PM

    Lab-grown coffee tastes pretty darn good, scientists say

    December 12, 2023 at 10:42 PM

    Vegan diets can work wonders in preventing cardiovascular disease

    November 30, 2023 at 10:14 PM
  • Opinions

    Smoke, Mirrors, and Smears: Inside the Campaign Against Gaurav Srivastava (Review)

    May 14, 2025 at 10:45 AM

    Nathan Law and the High Cost of Dissent: A Review of Targeted, Episode 3

    May 13, 2025 at 9:46 AM

    From charts to conversations: a real review of Hint App, The Pattern, and TimePassages

    May 13, 2025 at 5:12 AM

    Where Time Touches Light: Yefan Liu and the Future of Cultural Design

    April 18, 2025 at 3:39 AM
    “Ancient Predator Resurfaces: The Terrifying Epicyon, Massive Canid Beast With Bone-Crushing Jaws, Shakes Experts to Their Core”

    “He’s Back From Extinction”: The Gigantic Epicyon Returns With Bone-Crushing Jaws That Terrified Prehistoric America

    April 16, 2025 at 7:53 AM
  • Policy
    Illustration of China's Chutian satellite constellation in very low Earth orbit. Image generated by AI.

    “US Issues Dire Warning”: China’s Bullet-Like Satellites Are Actively Spying From Low Orbit, Triggering Alarms in Washington

    May 19, 2025 at 5:45 PM
    Illustration of China's advanced missile technology and the U.S. response with the Golden Dome defense initiative. Image generated by AI.

    “Space Nukes Are Here”: China’s Orbital Weapons Trigger Alarms and Revive Trump’s Massive Golden Dome Defense Ambitions

    May 18, 2025 at 10:09 AM
    Illustration of France's future robotic army advancements (AI-generated, unrealistic). Credit: Ideogram.

    “France Overtakes U.S. War Tech”: Battle Robots to Hit the Front Lines by 2027 as America Lags Behind in Military AI Race

    May 14, 2025 at 8:07 AM
    Illustration of China's ambitious satellite megaconstellations and their impact on space debris (AI-generated, unrealistic). Credit: Ideogram.

    “China’s Satellite Swarms Are a Threat”: Starlink Rival Could Overwhelm Earth’s Orbit and Spark Global Space Crisis

    May 13, 2025 at 8:51 AM
    Illustration of a Chinese warship creating the illusion of a fleet using electronic jammers (AI-generated, unrealistic). Credit: Ideogram.

    “China’s Ghost Navy Tricks the World”: How One Warship Morphs Into a Terrifying Fleet in the Eyes of Its Enemies

    May 13, 2025 at 8:05 AM
  • Reports
    Illustration of the SABRE South Collaboration’s experimental setup for detecting dark matter in the Stawell Underground Physics Laboratory (AI-generated, non-realistic illustration). Credit: Ideogram.

    “Scientists Stunned by Mysterious Light”: Bold Experiment Uses 4-Inch Glowing Crystal Core to Unveil Secrets of Elusive Dark Matter

    May 5, 2025 at 6:05 AM
    Illustration of a precision laser being fired from Earth to a satellite orbiting the Moon during daylight (AI-generated, non-realistic illustration). Credit: Ideogram.

    China Hits the Moon With a Laser: First Daylight Lunar Reflection in History Stuns Scientists and Ignites Global Space Race

    May 4, 2025 at 5:09 PM
    Illustration of the SR-72 hypersonic jet soaring through the sky (AI-generated, non-realistic illustration). Credit: Ideogram.

    “China Stunned by US Jet”: SR-72 Hypersonic Aircraft to Fly at Over Mach 5 in 2025, Triggering Shock and Panic in Beijing

    May 4, 2025 at 6:03 AM
    Illustration of China's expansive underground military command center near Beijing (AI-generated, non-realistic illustration). Credit: Ideogram.

    China Unveils Its Military Mega-Project: Satellite Images Reveal Construction of the Largest Military Hub on Earth Spanning Over 1,000 Acres

    May 3, 2025 at 6:54 AM
    Illustration of China's new amphibious anti-tank missile system on the ZTD-05 vehicle (AI-generated, non-realistic illustration). Credit: Ideogram.

    “China Unleashes Amphibious Beast”: This Armored Truck-Turned-Tank Can Now Hunt Enemy Targets Across Rivers and Swamps

    May 2, 2025 at 5:52 AM
  • Research
    Illustration of a massive baby star HW2 consuming gas in its stellar formation. Image generated by AI.

    “Star Devours Like a Monster”: Astronomers Stunned as Baby Star Consumes Gas Equal to Two Jupiters Annually

    May 20, 2025 at 6:58 AM
    Illustration of bird-mimicking drones in a military operation. Image generated by AI.

    “Silent Death from the Sky”: China’s Bird-Like Drones Now Strike Targets Without Warning or Detection Anywhere

    May 20, 2025 at 5:45 AM
    Illustration of a new method to control insect cyborgs using ultraviolet light. Image generated by AI.

    “Mind-Controlled Roaches Are Real”: Scientists Use UV Helmets to Wirelessly Command Cockroach Cyborgs in Chilling New Experiment

    May 19, 2025 at 3:52 PM
    Illustration of a supercomputer simulating magnetized turbulence in space. Image generated by AI.

    World’s Most Powerful Supercomputer Just Mapped Massive Magnetic Turbulence in Galaxy, Uncovering a Chaotic New Space Phenomenon

    May 19, 2025 at 9:09 AM
    Illustration of the YFQ-42A and YFQ-44A Collaborative Combat Aircraft flying alongside crewed jets. Image generated by AI.

    “US Eyes Total Air Control”: New Air-Launched Attack Drone Could Redefine American Military Superiority in Future Warzones

    May 19, 2025 at 8:01 AM
Sustainability Times

Insects may feel pain, evidence shows

Eirwen WilliamsEirwen WilliamsDecember 16, 2022 at 1:54 AM0
Share Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email Copy Link
Follow Us
Google News
Photo: Pixabay/RonBerg 
Share
Twitter Facebook LinkedIn WhatsApp Email Copy Link

Photo: Pixabay/RonBerg 

At least a trillion insects are killed annually for food and animal feed. Routine slaughter methods include extreme heat and cold, often preceded by starvation. By comparison, “only” around 79 billion mammals and bird livestock are slaughtered every year.

Scholars have long recognised that the survival value of pain means many animals experience it, supposedly with the exception of insects. But we surveyed more than 300 scientific studies and found evidence that at least some insects feel pain. Other insects, meanwhile, haven’t been studied in enough detail yet.

We also carried out our own study into bumblebees’ response to potentially harmful stimuli. The way they reacted to the stimuli was similar to pain responses in humans and other animals we accept feel pain.

Pesticides kill trillions more wild insects every year. The actual cause of death is often paralysis, asphyxiation, or dissolving the internal organs, sometimes over several days.

If insects feel pain, insect farming and pest control would cause mass suffering. Yet animal welfare debates and laws almost universally ignore insects. One reason is that, historically, insects were often viewed as too simple with too short a lifespan. But evidence that insects feel pain is accumulating.

The question of whether insects feel pain is hard to answer. Pain is an inherently private experience. The difficulty of diagnosing pain when the being in question can’t talk is illustrated by the relatively recent treatment of babies during surgery.

As recently as the 1980s, many surgeons believed babies could not feel pain and rarely used anaesthetics because they thought babies’ obvious responses, such as screaming and writhing, were “just reflexes”. Even though we still do not have proof babies feel pain, most now accept that they do with near certainty.

For any being that cannot directly communicate its suffering, we need to rely on common sense and probability. The more pain indicators found, the higher the probability. It is important to use consistent criteria across animals, and to look for the same behavioural indicators of pain in insects as one would use in a cow or pet dog.

Pain in the brain

Most animals display “nociception” – the processing of harmful stimuli which can result in reflex-like responses. Scientists have long known that insects display nociception. However, if an animal detects potentially damaging stimuli, it is not necessarily an indicator of “ouch-like” pain that in humans is generated in the brain. Both nociception and pain can happen, to some extent, independently of each other.

In a recent study, we discovered bumblebee responses to heat depend on other motivations. We gave bumblebees four feeders: two heated and two unheated. Each feeder dispensed sugar water, which bumblebees love.

photo: Pixabay/Virvoreanu-Laurentiu

When every feeder had the same concentration of sugar water, bees avoided the two heated feeders. But when the heated feeders dispensed sweeter sugar water than the unheated feeders, bumblebees often chose the heated feeders. Their love of sugar outweighed their hatred of heat. This suggests bees feel pain, because (like humans) their responses are more than just reflexes.

Bees also remembered the heated and unheated feeders, and they used this memory to decide which to feed from. So, the trade-off happened in the brain.

Insect brains change their behavioural responses to harm in other ways. For example, hungry flies are less likely to jump away from extreme heat than satiated flies. Decapitated flies can still jump but they do not display this difference, demonstrating their brain’s involvement in heat avoidance. Communication between the brain and the responsive body part is also consistent with pain.

Other pain indicators

The framework we used to evaluate evidence for pain in different insects was the one that recently led the UK government to recognise pain in two other major invertebrate groups, decapod crustaceans (including crabs, lobsters, and prawns) and cephalopods (including octopuses and squid), by including them in the Animal Welfare (Sentience) Act 2022. The framework has eight criteria, which assess whether an animal’s nervous system can support pain (such as brain-body communication), and whether its behaviour indicates pain (like motivational trade-offs).

Flies and cockroaches satisfy six of the criteria. According to the framework, this amounts to “strong evidence” for pain. Despite weaker evidence in other insects, many still show “substantial evidence” for pain. Bees, wasps, and ants fulfil four criteria, while butterflies, moths, crickets, and grasshoppers fulfil three.

Beetles, the largest group of insects, only satisfy two criteria. But, like other insects that received low scores, there are very few studies on beetles in this context. We found no evidence of any insect failing all the criteria.

Our findings matter because the evidence for pain in insects is roughly equivalent to evidence for pain in other animals which are already protected under UK law. Octopuses, for example, show very strong evidence for pain (seven criteria).

In response, the UK government included both octopuses and crabs in the Animal Welfare (Sentience) Act 2022, legally recognising their capacity for pain.

The UK government set a precedent: strong evidence of pain warrants legal protection. At least some insects meet this standard, so it is time to shield them. For starters, we recommend including insects under the Animal Welfare (Sentience) Act 2022, which would legally acknowledge their capacity to feel pain. But this law only requires the government to consider their welfare when drafting future legislation.

If we want to regulate practices such as farming and scientific research, the government needs to extend existing laws. For example, the Animal Welfare Act 2006, which makes it an offence to cause “unnecessary suffering” to animals covered by the act. This may lead to insect farms, like conventional farms, minimising animal suffering and using humane slaughter methods.

The Animals (Scientific Procedures) Act 1986 regulates the use of protected animals in any experimental or other scientific procedure that may cause pain, suffering, distress or lasting harm to the animal. Protecting insects under this act, as octopuses already are, would regulate insect research, reducing the number of insects tested and ensuring that experiments have a strong scientific rationale.

Finally, pesticides are a huge welfare concern for wild insects. We recommend developing more humane pesticides, which kill insects faster and minimise their suffering.

This article was written by Matilda Gibbons, a PhD candidate in behavioural neuroscience at Queen Mary University of London; Andrew Crump, a postdoctoral research officer at the London School of Economics and Political Science; and Lars Chittka, a professor of sensory and behavioural ecology at Queen Mary University of London. It is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Did you like it? 4.5/5 (28)

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

News, investigations, and analysis — our top stories every morning to start your day right.

Biodiversity Wildlife
Follow on Google News Follow on X (Twitter)
Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email Copy Link
Previous ArticleA new method can rid drinking water of toxic ‘forever chemicals’
Next Article A hardier coffee plant could save yields worldwide from climate change
Eirwen Williams
  • X (Twitter)

Eirwen Williams is a New York-based journalist at Sustainability Times, covering science, climate policy, sustainable innovation, and environmental justice. A graduate of NYU’s Journalism Institute, he explores how cities adapt to a warming world. With a focus on people-powered change, his stories spotlight the intersection of activism, policy, and green technology. Contact : [email protected]

Keep Reading
Illustration of extreme heat conditions affecting regions like Death Valley, Jacobabad, and Basra. Image generated by AI.

“Earth Is Boiling Over”: These 9 Scorching Hot Spots Are Blistering Proof Our Planet Is Heating Up Faster Than Ever Before

Illustration of wildfire smoke impacting air quality and health. Image generated by AI.

Wildfire Smoke Disaster: This Groundbreaking Study Links U.S. Blazes to 15,000 Deaths and an Economic Hit of $160 Billion

Smoke, Mirrors, and Smears: Inside the Campaign Against Gaurav Srivastava (Review)

Add A Comment

Comments are closed.

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

News, investigations, and analysis — our top stories every morning to start your day right.

Trending
Illustration of Thorizon's molten salt reactor technology converting nuclear waste into clean energy. Image generated by AI.
“Nuclear Waste Becomes Power Goldmine”: European Firm to Generate 100 MW for 40 Years Using Radioactive Leftovers
Illustration of underwater concrete spheres used for solar energy storage. Image generated by AI.
Giant Underwater Concrete Spheres Are Quietly Revolutionizing Solar Energy Storage in the Most Unexpected Ocean Depths
Illustration of robotic centipedes navigating agricultural terrain. Image generated by AI.
These Creeping Vineyard Robots Use Insect-Like Legs to Annihilate Weeds With Ruthless Precision and Rock-Bottom Costs
News by category
  • Featured
  • Cities
  • Climate
  • Energy
  • Impact
  • Markets
  • Opinions
  • Policy
  • Reports
  • Research
Information
  • About Us
  • Meet the Team
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Legal Mentions
  • Privacy Policy

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

News, investigations, and analysis — our top stories every morning to start your day right.

Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn RSS
© Sustainability-Times.com. All rights reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.