- Soldier Grubs
- Compost Grubs
- Meal Grubs
- BSF Grubs
- BioGrubs
- Prota Grubs
- ... (any and all suggestions Welcome)
That is about how I would order them; best names being at the top, but for second place I would say "BSF Grubs". That is, unless Dr. Shepard would be up for a link exchange, but you're likely his worst enemy in the economic sense. Before long Ebay will probably be full of "soldier grubs".
Worm Man has the second Google hit on "Phoenix Worm" and they are already pretending to marketing "soldier grubs". Interesting, I just checked there and their page on Phoenix Worms now only links to a forum they are trying to start.
http://www.wormman.com/cat_phoenix.cfm (I was going to buy from there but after going through the whole rigamoral I found that there was no option to pay with PayPal, as was claimed, only send a check. I hate that! Worm Man has horrible reviews, even in the forums hosted on their own site.)
"Soldier grub" gets about 214 Google hits. (Oh looky there, Lumeniki [my wiki] made it to the first results page.) '"BSFL" "soldier fly"' gets 372. I'd say "soldier grub" is catching on already.
"Compost grubs" is too general. There are other grubs that might be used for composting. (I was thinking of seeing if any would breed easily indoors to keep them away from raccoons. For example, flightless fruit fly larva.)
I don't think you should try so hard to avoid the ick factor, through naming. Critter-phobes are probably not gonna be interested in your product anyway. BioPods are not for moms or teachers to get for their kids' science fair. It is out of their price range. They are for people who love this kind of stuff. "Grub" is more accurate than "worm". Worms can be parasites just like grubs can be "maggots" but potential customers will probably figure you are using benign grubs. I would deal with the ick factor through education. Make it easy to find the information about the real environmental health benefits of BSFL. I'd start with the Wikipedia.
2. What verb best describes the process of transforming your food waste to value added proteins and insects?
- bioconversion of putrescent waste
- grub composting
- prota composting
- biogenic protein conversion
- food waste morphology
- ... (any and all suggestions Welcome)
I think "grub composting" would have to be the first choice, mainly for accuracy.
"Putrescent" sounds more icky than necessary. "Bioconversion of kitchen waste" implies this is more than just composting, but again, it is too general. There are many ways to bioconvert kitchen waste, for example, turn it into poultry eggs. And we are really stretching the definition of bioconversion; this usually refers to using microorganisms or plants to make a non-living product.
There may be a scientific term for what is done by detritivores, worms, grubs or whatever.