![]() ![]() Given where you’re seeing them, its probably their starting point before they end up in another room. They’re not particularly bright or smart so they will do this anywhere in the home. All they want to do is mate and lay eggs. Inside the box are developing stages and the ones you see now are the adults. In most cases, they’re brought home when you go shopping at the grocer. Could be something like flour, cereal, cookies, pasta or some other packaged food. Could they be coming from the sink?īiscuit beetles are a stored product pest and no doubt coming from something you’re keeping in the cabinets above the counter or close by. See them in my kitchen, all over the counter just walking around. TREE BORERS – HOW TO IDENTIFY THEIR DAMAGE.SOLAR POWERED GROUND STAKE REPELLER REBOOT.POLES, SNAKE TONGS, GRABBERS AND OTHER MISC.INSECTICIDES: SCALP (FOR USE ON PEOPLE).INSECTICIDES: BACTERIA BASED (BACILLUS THURINGIENSIS).BAIT, GRANULE AND LIQUID STATIONS (EMPTY STATIONS).With suitable hygiene, and by preventing access into the attic by nest-builders, the successful eradication of this pest should be assured. Beware also of bread in fire-places that has been dropped down the chimney by birds. These are likely to have come from nests of wasps or birds in the attic. Removing disused and old foodstuff should eliminate an infestation.Īdult beetles may be seen around fire-places and air vents with no apparent food-source available. Rarely-used dried-foods such as flour or spices are often the source of an infestation. ![]() Before emergence as an adult beetle, a minimum of nine days is spent as the pupa in an oval shaped cell moulded by the larva using the food material.īecause the Bread beetle larva thrives in dark, warm, undisturbed places, it is essential to search thoroughly for the food-source of the larva if adults are found wandering around. The larva increases in size and, at about 5mm in length, it enters the pupal stage. In its search for food, it may bite into packaged or hidden food sources. When the larva emerges from the egg, it is less than 1mm in length. In cool temperatures (below 15✬) there is only one generation per year, in moderate temperatures two, while at higher temperatures (above 23✬) there may be five or more.Įggs are laid by mated females on or near the foodstuff. The speed of development through the life cycle depends on temperature, moisture, quality and abundance of food. In common with other beetles, this species passes through four life-stages: egg, larva, pupa and adult (pictured below). The Biscuit beetle occurs in houses, stores, warehouses and kitchens throughout central and northern Europe, including the UK, sometimes in very large numbers. Photo credits: Kamran Iftikhar / Wikimedia Commons Has much weaker punctures on the surface of the wing covers (elytra). Larvae bore into wood, where they feed for 3-5 years.Īntennae with many serrations, while Biscuit beetle has three large ones at the tip. Pronotum with obvious ‘hump’ like a monk’s cowl. Somewhat larger and darker brown, antennae shorter than legs. Line drawings © The Natural History Museum. Biscuit beetles have large dark eyes.ĭorsal view Lateral view Ventral view Biscuit (L) and Furniture beetle (R) ![]() The head is partially hidden by the pronotum (the plate that covers the upper part of the thorax). There are three flattened segments at the tip of antennae. Furniture beetles (or Woodworms) are similar but are somewhat larger and darker and their antennae are shorter than the legs (in Bread beetles the lengths are similar). They are small, between 2 and 4 mm in length, reddish-brown and, under magnification, reveal fine grooves running lengthways along the wing cases. The adult beetles are usually noticed first. However, this beetle is not harmful to health and despite its close resemblance to the Common furniture beetle or Woodworm beetle (in the adult stage), it does not feed on wood. It is able to feed on a variety of plant and animal products including bread and flour and even hot spices and drugs. ![]() The Bread beetle, Stegobium paniceum, also known as the Biscuit beetle (or the Drugstore beetle in the U.S.A.) is one of the commonest pest insects of stored food. Other names: Drugstore beetle, Bread beetle ![]()
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