SUMMARYResearchers at Ferdowsi University of Mashhad found that superworm larvae can clean skeletal specimens for museum and forensic use, offering a practical alternative to dermestid beetles. The study in PLoS One says superworms remove soft tissue efficiently while reducing the infestation risks that come with beetle colonies. The work could make bone preparation safer, easier to manage, and less environmentally hazardous.

Cleaned skeletal specimens using superworms. Top from left to right: rook, alligator gar, Eurasian eagle-owl. Bottom from left to right: gray wolf, wild cat.
Rastekar et al., 2026, PLOS One/CC-BY 4.0
arstechnica.com
Cleaned skeletal specimens using superworms. Top from left to right: rook, alligator gar, Eurasian eagle-owl. Bottom from left to right: gray wolf, wild cat.

Fatemeh Rastekar, Niloofar Alaei Kakhki and Morteza Monfared discuss the safe and practical utility of superworm larvae for cleaning museum specimens. Credit: Anthony Lewis, PLOS/CC-BY 4.0

Preparing skeletal specimens for display in museums or for forensic studies requires the bones to be thoroughly cleaned to remove any remaining flesh or soft tissue. However, the need for thorough cleaning must be balanced against the risk of damaging the actual bones. According to a new paper published in the journal PLoS One, the larvae of so-called "superworms" (Zophobas morio)—a common pet food—offer a practical alternative.

There are existing methods for cleaning skeletal remains, such as burial, digestive enzymes, or chemical treatments. But most have drawbacks, including damaging bones, taking a long time to process, having expensive operational costs, or the use of environmentally hazardous substances. Using dermestid beetles has become the preferred method for skeletal cleaning since they can efficiently remove soft tissue without damaging the bone. The downside is that without strict containment practices, the beetles can escape and lay eggs that hatch, leading to infestations that threaten museum collections.

Fatemah Rastekar of Ferdowsi University of Mashhad in Iran and co-authors thought superworms might bring the same benefits as the beetles without the risk of infestation. For one thing, beetle colonies span all life stages and hence require complex containment; superworm cleaning only requires the larval stage, which lasts 10–12 weeks compared to just five to seven weeks for the beetles. And the larvae don't pupate in crowded conditions, so it's easier to manage the colonies while reducing the risk of escape. But could superworms match the cleaning efficiency of their rival beetles?

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