Bangkok Post

EIGHT-LEGGED SNACK

Cambodia’s fried tarantulas under threat

- By Suy Se

While a plate piled high with hairy, palm-sized tarantulas is the stuff of nightmares f or some, these garlic fried spiders are a coveted treat in Cambodia, where the only fear is that they may soon vanish due to deforestat­ion and unchecked hunting.

Taking a bite out of the plump arachnids has become a popular photo-op for squealing tourists who pass through Skun, the central Cambodian town nicknamed “Spidervill­e” for its massive market of creepy crawlers.

But the bulk of the clientele are locals who are there to load up on a traditiona­l snack known as aping that vendors say is becoming scarce — and more expensive — as rapid developmen­t wipes out jungle habitats.

“Aping are famous in Cambodia but now they are not abundant, they have become rare,” Chea Voeun, a tarantula vendor, told AFP from her stall where she sells other fried insects including crickets and scorpions.

Ms Voeun, who has been selling the delicacy for 20 years, used to source the spiders from nearby forests, where hunters dug them out of burrows dotting the jungle floor.

But those trees have since been razed for cashew nut plantation­s, forcing Ms Voeun and other vendors to rely on middlemen to procure the spiders, which are harvested from faraway forested provinces.

That has jacked up the price of the tarantulas to US$1 (31 baht) a piece, a nearly tenfold spike over the past decade.

For now the price surge is helping line the pockets of vendors who can unload several hundred spiders a day, but they fear that stocks are running low and will kill their businesses in the long-term.

“When the big forests disappear, these spiders will no longer exist,” said seller Lou Srey Sros, as tourists snapped pictures of children playing with the eight-legged creatures.

Locals say the spiders, whose taste has been compared to crab, are best prepared simply: dipped in salt and garlic and then tossed into a pan of sizzling oil.

Tarantulas have been part of the Cambodian diet for generation­s, prized for their purported medicinal qualities.

But they are believed to have cemented their place on the Cambodian palate during the brutal years under the Khmer Rouge in the late 1970s.

The Maoist regime forced millions of Cambodians out of the cities and was ultimately responsibl­e for murdering, overworkin­g and starving to death nearly a quarter of the population in its drive to create an agrarian utopia.

Famine pushed many to forage for any sustenance they could find, eating everything from rats to lizards and tarantulas.

While the Khmer Rouge’s devastatin­g rule came to an end in 1979, spiders stayed on the menu.

But the jungles which are home to them are now rapidly disappeari­ng.

Cambodia has one of the fastest deforestat­ion rates in the world, with huge swaths of forest cleared for rubber plantation­s and timber.

The Southeast Asian country has lost 20% of its forest cover since 1990, according to the conservati­on NGO Fauna and Flora Internatio­nal (FFI).

It is not just habitat loss but over-harvesting to meet a high demand that is driving the spiders out of existence, said Tom Gray, director of Science and Global Developmen­t for Wildlife Alliance.

“Across Southeast Asia it is unsustaina­ble hunting in our forests rather than direct habitat loss which is causing the biggest impacts on biodiversi­ty,” he told AFP.

The tourist frenzy has helped fuel the tarantula trade, with busloads of travellers stopping in Skun to taste the unusual snack.

“It just makes me a little bit swimmy because that was not what I would eat at home but I am here so it’s time to try them,” Australian tourist Elisabeth Dark said after taking a bite of a spider leg.

But for many Cambodians, the only fear factor is that the treat will soon run out.

“The next generation­s may not know about them because these beasts have become so rare, not like before,” lamented vendor Lou Srey Sros.

“As more people clear forests to plant cashew nut trees, they will be gone.”

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 ??  ?? JUST ADD SALT AND GARLIC: Live tarantulas and leaves in a container at Skun, the central Cambodian town nicknamed ‘Spidervill­e’.
JUST ADD SALT AND GARLIC: Live tarantulas and leaves in a container at Skun, the central Cambodian town nicknamed ‘Spidervill­e’.
 ??  ?? TASTES LIKE CRAB, APPARENTLY: A Cambodian woman frying tarantulas for tourists at Skun town in Kampong Cham province.
TASTES LIKE CRAB, APPARENTLY: A Cambodian woman frying tarantulas for tourists at Skun town in Kampong Cham province.
 ??  ?? NO PLACE FOR ARACHNOPHO­BES: A Cambodian woman digging in a burrow of tarantulas at Skun town in Kampong Cham province.
NO PLACE FOR ARACHNOPHO­BES: A Cambodian woman digging in a burrow of tarantulas at Skun town in Kampong Cham province.
 ??  ?? EIGHT-LEGGED SNACK: A Cambodian guide eating a fried tarantula at Skun town.
EIGHT-LEGGED SNACK: A Cambodian guide eating a fried tarantula at Skun town.

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