The nutritional profile of the Zophobas morio is, "46.80% proteins, 43.64% lipids, 8.17% ashes and 1.39% carbohydrates."
A quick search led me to this:
It appears that the nutrition profile is very similar. Using either should work similar, so then it comes down to management of the food source.
Live mealworms can be refrigerated, super worms can not. Mealworms life cycle is much faster than superworms. Supers will reach and stay as a larvae for 5-7 months, and won’t pupate until they are isolated into a single cell container. I used bead organizers, one worm in each compartment with a small air hole drilled over each cell. Within 21 days they’ll pupate 2x. Mature worm > alien > beetle
I used super worms because they were easier for the setup I had and bc I was feeding almost 100 parrots, the life cycle of superworms made it much simpler. I also had a pretty huge colony of Dubai roaches, bc they had basically the same temp/food/habitat requirements. (Not housed together, lol.)
One of the benefits that I haven’t seen mentioned (in other threads, may have missed it) is that you can gut load and/or coat live feeders with supplemental nutrition. Calcium, paprika, dried chili etc.
I have not set up a new live food system for the chickens yet, except allowing the chickens access to my compost pile a few times a week, but based on the mob behavior they exhibit when they know I’m setting up the pile for them, I’m pretty sure the chooks would lose their minds over supers/meal worms and/or roaches.
Good luck!