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The Philippines
AsiaSoutheast Asia

Philippines’ only cockroach expert defends bugs from extinction

The 31-year-old soft-spoken scientist has been dubbed ‘cockroach lord’ and occasionally finds himself in demand for very specific situations

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Cristian Lucanas, an entomologist from the University of the Philippines Los Banos, shows preserved specimens of cockroaches among troves inside a laboratory at the University of the Philippines in Los Banos town, south of Manila, on February 11. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

A thin band of light from Cristian Lucanas’ headlamp pierces the blackness of a Philippine rainforest as he digs through the underbrush before gently scooping up a cockroach with his bare hands.

As the Southeast Asian country’s lone expert on the oft-misunderstood insect – and discoverer of 15 species – friends have dubbed the soft-spoken scientist “Ipis Lord”, after the local name for the ubiquitous bug.

While fully aware most view cockroaches as disgusting, disease-bearing pests, the 31-year-old University of the Philippines entomologist says they deserve more study – and credit – for their key role in the planet’s ecosystem.

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“I also hated cockroaches when I was a child,” Lucanas said with a grin during an interview in the college town of Los Banos, south of Manila.

“Fear of cockroaches is innate,” he conceded, adding he usually tells people “I work in a museum” when asked about his job.

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His girlfriend, also an entomologist, is more understanding, though her work focuses on insects less reviled than the cockroach, of which there are more than 4,600 known species.

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