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    Watching, touching and eating bugs in new museum

    Audubon Insectarium cafetariaPhoto: Cheryl Gerber for The New York Times

    In the new $25 million Audubon Insectarium, which opened in June, you can watch Formosan termites eat through a wooden skyline of New Orleans (as if this city didn’t have enough problems), stick your head into a transparent dome in a kitchen closet swarming with giant cockroaches and watch dung beetles plow their way through a mound of waste.

    And then you can engage in the museum’s most brilliant interactivity by joining in the line of eager visitors prepared to munch on a handful of crunchy Cajun-fried crickets or scoop up some wax-worm stir fry. Can you imagine eating roasted lion at a zoo or filleted dolphin at an aquarium? But here the admired creatures are served in elaborate dips and sautéed dishes.

    Audubon Insectarium cafePhoto: Cheryl Gerber for The New York Times

    Read more: New York Times (August 2, 2008)

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    One Response to “Watching, touching and eating bugs in new museum”

    1. Home Aquarium Says:

      very interesting, keep up the good work

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