Health Care Market Research

All Important News

科学者は「テキーラ」ワームの予期せぬ正体を明らかにします

healthcaremarketresearch.news


メスカルワームカップ

に発表された研究 PeerJ 生活・環境 リュウゼツランから作られた蒸留アルコール飲料であるメスカルのボトルに見られる幼虫の種を分析しました。 少し意外なことに、この研究では、すべての幼虫が単一の蛾の種であることがわかりました。 C. redtenbacheri、メキシコで最も一般的に消費される食用昆虫の 1 つです。

メスカルはリュウゼツランの樹液を煮て発酵させた蒸留酒です。 すべてのテキーラの種類を含むメスカル飲料の大部分は、純粋な蒸留物として販売されていますが、選択された少数のものには、予期しない添加物、ワームが含まれています.

スペイン語で gusanos de maguey と呼ばれ、リュウゼツランのワームに翻訳されます。これらの独特の伴奏は、真のワームではなく、一種の昆虫の幼虫です。 これらの幼虫をメスカルに組み込む慣行は比較的最近のことです.メスカルの生産は、メキシコの初期のスペイン人入植者にまでさかのぼる豊かな歴史を誇っています. しかし、幼虫が初めて飲料に導入されたのは 1940 年代になってからのことです。

それ以来、グサノスはメスカルの人気を高めるのに役立ってきましたが、そのアイデンティティはとらえどころのないままです. メスカルでどのタイプの幼虫が使用されているか、またはそれが 1 つまたは複数の幼虫に属しているかについてのコンセンサスはありません。[{” attribute=””>species. They’ve been variously ascribed to moths, butterflies, and even a type of weevil.

“It’s relatively easy to broadly determine the kind of larva based on the shape of the head, but their identity has never been confirmed,” said Akito Kawahara, curator at the Florida Museum’s McGuire Center for Lepidoptera and Biodiversity. “This is probably because most biologists are not looking inside mezcal bottles.”

Agave Plant Mezcal

Mezcal is made from the boiled and distilled sap of various agave species. Credit: Charles Lemaire

In a new study, recently published in the journal PeerJ Life & Environment, Kawahara and his colleagues decided to pin down the identity of the mezcal gusanos. In 2022, they traveled to Oaxaca Mexico, which has been the center of mezcal production for hundreds of years. There, they visited distilleries and obtained as many different brands as they could find to ensure a diverse sampling of larvae.

There were very few distinguishing features that could be used to assign the specimens to a particular group or species; fortunately, mezcal makes an excellent preservative, preventing the decay of the larvae and their internal packets of DNA. The researchers successfully extracted and analyzed genetic material from 18 specimens, but the results they got back were unexpected.

Mezcal Bottle

Mezcal is a type of distilled alcoholic beverage that is made from the agave plant, which is native to Mexico. It is similar to tequila but is made from a wider variety of agave plants and is typically produced using traditional methods such as underground pit ovens and stone mills.

Since gusanos de maguey aren’t commercially farmed, the authors suspected that mezcal worms would likely be sourced from several unrelated species. This included a type of butterfly called the tequila giant skipper (Aegiale hesperiaris), which lays its eggs on agave plants. Their large, milky-white caterpillars parasitize several agave species, boring tunnels through the rigid, succulent leaves. The eponymous common name, combined with their white larvae — which match the color of many gusanos de maguey — marked them out as a primary suspect.

Instead, the DNA unequivocally identified all 18 specimens as the caterpillars of agave redworm moths (Comadia redtenbacheri), another type of agave parasite with rosy-hued larvae. The researchers suspect that accounts of white gusanos de maguey come from caterpillars that have been stored in alcohol for long amounts of time and have consequently leached their color.

The results add a sobering note to what is currently a boom in the international popularity of mezcal. According to a report by Straits Research, an independent analytical firm, the sale of mezcal is expected to increase by 22% in the next decade, reaching $2.1 billion in profits by 2030, riding a growing wave of interest in artisanal, ethically manufactured products.

Unlike tequila, which is mass-produced in industrial autoclaves, mezcal production continues to rely on small-scale facilities in Mexico’s arid countryside. Farmers roast the barrel-shaped agave cores in open fire pits or specialized kilns, then chop and pulverize the crisp stumps for fermentation and small-batch distribution. It’s unclear whether all mezcal distilleries and landowners will be able to sustainably scale up production to meet demand.

The fate of agave redworm moths is also uncertain. Maguey worms have been harvested as a delicacy for centuries, beginning with the Aztecs. But demand for the larva in Mexican culinary establishments has also seen an increase in recent years, to the extent that wild populations of these caterpillars are considered at risk of overharvesting.

“Agave worms are still fairly common, but the impact of mezcal becoming popular can have long-term negative effects on local populations because they are harvested in the wild,” Kawahara said.

Red agave caterpillars burrow deep into the core of their host plants, and collecting them often kills the agave. For production to scale with the growing market, it’s possible local harvesters may need to actively grow caterpillars on agave farms or find ways to produce them outside of their host plants.

Reference: “Mezcal worm in a bottle: DNA evidence suggests a single moth species” by Akito Y. Kawahara​, Jose I. Martinez, David Plotkin, Amanda Markee, Violet Butterwort, Christian D. Couch and Emmanuel F.A. Toussaint, 8 March 2023, PeerJ.
DOI: 10.7717/peerj.14948





Source link