• Nollij@sopuli.xyz
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        10 months ago

        While you may not do so intentionally, I can assure you that you do, in fact, eat a lot of bugs. In fact, there are countless standards on how much bug can be in your common foods. The amount is never zero.

  • anon6789@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    If a buggy got in the fruit, it would have had to have pierced the skin of the fruit. In the time it took for that fruit to get across the country/world to the market and your home, that hole would let oxygen in, making a blemish or squishy spot. Most “ugly” produce will never see a store shelf. Some will get processed into other things so you won’t see it, but whole produce should be pretty bug free, at least internally.

    As the other commenters said though, most is blasted to hell with chemicals to keep this from being an issue.

  • DogMuffins@discuss.tchncs.de
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    10 months ago

    Pesticides keep the bugs off commercial fruit.

    Think carefully about that though… imagine spraying toxic chemicals on your food so nothing wants to eat it.

  • megsmagik@feddit.it
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    10 months ago

    I have a (little) garden with fruit and vegetables and only a few have bugs inside, like other commenters said when they have bugs they also have a hole so they become inedible before I pick them. I don’t use pesticides and sometimes I find an ant or a worm, mostly inside figs, apples and pears, and when there are wasps inside you can spot them when the fruit is still on the tree and leave them alone!

  • OmegaMouse
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    10 months ago

    Figs technically do - the female fig wasp enters a fig to lay eggs, dying in the process. A few weeks later the newborn male wasps then fertilise the female wasps and dig tunnels to help the females escape. However the leftover wasps get broken down by enzymes in the fig regardless.

    Not all commercially grown figs are pollinated in this way though from what I understand.