________________
LOS BANOS - A thin band of light from Cristian Lucanas's 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.

Entomologist Cristian Lucanas looks for cockroaches on a bark of a fallen coconut tree at the tropical rainforest inside the campus of the University of the Philippines
"I also hated cockroaches when I was a child," Lucanas said with a grin during an interview with AFP in the college town of Los Banos, south of Manila.

Here, Lucanas looks into a cockroach specimen with a microscope inside a laboratory at the University of the Philippines
Even so, Lucanas keeps a can of bug spray handy at work, ready to kill any live cockroaches that might view the museum's 250,000 preserved insect species as a potential snack.
Lucanas's obsession began 12 years ago on a field trip to a bat cave on a remote island, its floor crawling with cockroaches feasting on guano.
When his biology class adviser was unable to identify the species, Lucanas knew he had found his niche.
A lifelong fan of J.R.R. Tolkien, Lucanas often names his discoveries after creatures in the author's "Lord of the Rings" trilogy: "Valar", "Hobbitoblatta", and "Nazgul".
Their ranks are set to grow once he finishes writing up scientific papers on his newest finds, he promised.
Given the uniqueness of his specialty, the young scientist occasionally finds himself in demand, albeit for very specific situations.
The country's biggest bug spray firm once invited him to lecture its staff on cockroach identification.
Its top restaurant chain also sought his advice, desperate to stop raids on their commissary by so-called German cockroaches, an invasive species from India.
"Control is not really my forte," Lucanas admitted.
But cockroaches are far from the indestructible creatures that they are often portrayed as, he insists.
It is not true, for instance, that cockroaches will inherit the earth after a nuclear war, he said, noting that their resistance to radioactive exposure is about on par with other insects.
Humans, not bombs, pose a more immediate threat to the creatures, he said, noting that some species, especially in mountain environments, reproduce slowly and could disappear if their habitats are encroached upon.
Several cave-dwelling Philippine species first described in the 1890s during the Spanish colonial period "have not been seen again" since their habitats were opened to tourism, he explained.

Lucanas shows preserved specimens of cockroaches among troves inside a laboratory at the University of the Philippines
He laments that most science funding in his country "goes to research that will directly affect humans", worrying that at best he will only be able to catalog and explain the Philippines' cockroaches.
But for now, that's enough, he said when asked about the decades still left in his career.
"I think I'll stick with what I'm doing. It's how I've built my reputation.
"And I really do enjoy working with cockroaches."