Developing, testing and validating indicators of wild insect welfare

Grantee: Carl Soulsbury

 

Institution: University of Lincoln, United Kingdom

Grant amount: $92,148

 

Grant type: Challenge grants

Focal species: Carrion beetles (Nicrophorus vespilloides) and others

 

Conservation status: Least concern

Disciplines: Entomology, physiology, animal behavior, cognition

 

Research location: United Kingdom


Project summary

This project aims to develop and validate practical indicators of welfare in wild insects. Working with three common model species — Dubia cockroaches (Blaptica dubia), two-spotted crickets (Gryllus bimaculatus), and carrion beetles — it will measure a suite of behavioral and physiological stress responses including oxidative stress markers, fat reserves via NMR, and movement patterns tracked using AI-assisted video analysis. These measures will be validated against cognitive bias testing to identify which indicators reliably reflect negative welfare, and the most field-accessible measures will be applied to wild carrion beetle populations, testing whether lab-derived welfare indicators hold up under natural conditions. The goal is a generalizable welfare assessment toolkit that researchers can use across insect taxa in both captive and wild settings.

Why we funded this project

This project provides the first systematic, cross-taxa proof of concept for measuring welfare in wild insects, moving beyond the captive-only focus that has dominated invertebrate welfare research to date. Insects make up the vast majority of animal life on Earth, yet almost nothing is known about their welfare in the wild, so the knowledge generated by this project has the potential to facilitate large-scale impact. Funding this project also deepens our work with an existing grantee.

Find Carl’s other project, studying red foxes and Eurasian hedgehogs, here.


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Acoustic indicators of welfare in neotropical frogs: Calls as early-warning signals of sublethal suffering related to infection and environmental stress

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Towards welfare-centered prescribed fire