…but in Denmark, at least in comparison with other pests. Destructive flour beetle beetles were first found in Denmark in 1943, but they have since appeared more often. The Destructive flour beetle most likely came to Denmark from the tropics in Africa in connection with trade of goods between the two places. Anyhow it has also occurred in other countries that have traded with this part of the world. In Danish, the Destructive flour beetle is named…
Search Results for: Mealworm - Mealworm beetle larva
Index
…Lepidoptera Lepisma saccharina Lesser grain borer Lesser house fly Lesser mealworm beetle Longipalpa, Supella Lucilia Mauretanicus, Tenebroides Meal moth, Indian Mealworm beetle, lesser Mealworm beetle, yellow Meat skipper Mediterranean flour moth Mercator, Oryzaephilus Merchant grain beetle Mice, house Mice, yellow-necked Minutus, Cryptolestes Minutus, Lathridius Mite, cheese Mite, common house Mite, flour Mite, forage Mite, furniture Mite, hous…
Mealworm Beetle
…he reason why this beetle is considered a pest. Appearance The fully grown mealworm beetle is relatively large; between 12 and 18 mm long. Color wise they can vary from dark brown to completely black. Mealworm beetles have a flat shape, and they have a long and wrinkled hind body. Their front body is short and completely smooth in appearance. Like so many other beetles, they are shiny. From the top of the hind body, they have two wings, and it is…
House longhorn beetle
…eetle has two antennas that are divided into 11 joints. The house longhorn beetle larva is almost milky white, but also has some dark chitin parts placed around its mouth. The larva is equipped with small legs that are barely visible to the naked eye. It can be up to 25 mm long. Biology and behavior The house longhorn beetle belongs to the family wooden bucks (Cerambycidae). It is rare to see the adult house longhorn beetle as they mostly stay in…
Brown carpet beetle
…is responsible for the transport. Often the spread of the beetle is due to beetles or larvae being moved from one place to another through food, furniture, textiles, or the like. Damage The brown carpet beetle is certainly not a picky size. They are often considered pests as they can easily gnaw their way through feathers, packaging, hides, textiles, and wool. They can therefore cause great damage in homes or in public institutions such as museums…
Australian spider beetle
…ir own whitish cocoon in which they pupate. The cocoon has an almost tissue-paper-like appearance, and the webs of the larva can be seen as thin threads and spun cocoons in the infested area. The development from larva to fully adult thief beetle lasts about 3 to 4 months if the larva has good conditions e.g., at room temperature. When the larvae are fully developed, they most often leave this safe area. This means that they sometimes have to clim…
Deathwatch beetle
…place the wood with treated wood, such as pressure-impregnated timber. However, it is also possible to treat the wood with a wood preservative that protects the wood from both insect and fungal attacks. In hard-to-reach areas, it can be an advantage to treat with an insect powder that is distributed on the areas where the beetle moves. It will kill the beetles before they have time to lay their eggs….
History of the dark flour beetle
…boratory’s estimates came from the originally infected oatmeal. Dark flour beetle larva The dark flour beetle is now a common food pest in Denmark, Norway, Finland and Sweden, but is virtually unknown in most other countries. In Canada, Germany and the former Soviet Union, it is occasionally found in houses and storages, but regarded as a rare and relatively harmless species. British researchers suggest that the relatively high indoor temperatures…
Fur beetle
…an elongated little creature that is white, yellowish, or beige. But a fur beetle larva has a brown color and is hairy. In the end, it has a hair-brush, which makes it easy to recognize, size wise they are up to 1 cm long. One can take the ordinary fur- or carpet beetle larvae as a brown carpet beetle larva, as they are related. The easiest way to distinguish in between them, is by the location where they are found. If the larva is found indoors,…
The lesser mealworm beetle
…is uncertain whether it is relevant under practical conditions. The lesser mealworm beetle acts as a food pest in connection with the slaughter of chickens. Prior to the slaughter, the chickens are without food for a short period of time. This means that they eat a lot of beetles and beetle larvae. Some of them are probably still alive when the chickens are slaughtered. They make their way out and may end up in the parts of the chickens that are…
Bread beetle
…wood. Instead, it has a taste for starchy foods, hence the name. When the beetle larvae hatch, they leave circular holes in the material they have lived in. And these holes are confusingly like the holes in a tree that has hosted the borer beetle larvae. Bread beetles are not limited to one region, but are found all over the world. And often it is through shipping that the beetles are spread across the globe. Their history of shipping is not exac…
Tobacco beetle
…ow as Anobiidae. The size of the tobacco beetle is around 2-3 mm and a full-grown beetle can measure up to 4 mm. Therefore, we are talking about a very small beetle, that is difficult to spot. The tobacco beetle has a light brown color at the front and shield as well as long light brown hairs that are most evident on its legs. Its head is hidden under the neck shield. Biology and behavior The tobacco beetle thrives in a tropical or subtropical env…
Merchant grain beetle
…and has, as beetles typically do, six legs. As a larva, the merchant grain beetle larva has a yellowish-white color all over its body and a dark head. The larva becomes about 3 to 4 millimeters long. The merchant grain beetle is sometimes confused with the sawtoothed grain beetle, as the two species are closely related. However, there are easy ways to tell the difference between the two, for instance by keeping an eye on the behavior of the specif…
Soft wood boring beetle
…ns. Under the bark, the larval passages will stand out clearly as approx. 1-millimeter-deep grooves, forming a large pattern in the wood. However, the grooves may be deeper than that. Just before the larva pupates, it gnaws even further into the tree. The larva digs approx. 1 centimeter down into the wood to achieve a more protected position in the tree. Within one to two years, the soft wood boring beetle is fully developed, and it is getting rea…
The yellow mealworm beetle
Yellow mealworm beetle Season for yellow mealworm beetle Latin: Tenebrio molitor. Its larvae are probably best known as those mealworms that are sold as animal feed. It is a rather large beetle, 1.5 cm long. The yellow mealworm beetle lives in birds’ nests, where the larvae feed on the food spills that accumulate in the nests when the young birds are fed. The larvae can also live on all sorts of products containing starch, and they eat cereals, f…
Wasp beetle
…or Although the wasp beetle tries its hardest to look like a wasp, it is a beetle. The wasp beetle is thus neither aggressive nor dangerous, but it tends to restless behavior, which can seem annoying to the people who do not like beetles and similar small animals. Before they are fully grown, wasp beetles also undergo a larval stage. While they are larvae, they prefer to stay in dead, dry deciduous tree in which they have hatched. It is only as ad…
Ham beetle
…r dried food, they like to prey on other insects. Both ham beetles and ham beetle larvae like to eat smaller insects. However, the larvae are the hungriest, and therefore eat significantly more than ham beetles. Damage Although, as mentioned, there are three different species of Necrobia in Denmark, there are only two of them that can be a nuisance. The red-legged ham beetle (Necrobia rufipes) and the red-necked ham beetle (Necrobia ruficollis) go…
The lesser mealworm beetle
…is uncertain whether it is relevant under practical conditions. The lesser mealworm beetle acts as a food pest in connection with the slaughter of chickens. Prior to the slaughter, the chickens are without food for a short period of time. This means that they eat a lot of beetles and beetle larvae. Some of them are probably still alive when the chickens are slaughtered. They make their way out and may end up in the parts of the chickens that are…
Mealworm beetle
…and grain warehouses, but nowadays they are no longer important as a pest. Mealworm beetle The adult beetles seen usually come from birds’ nests in the neighbourhood. On warm summer evenings they often fly in through the windows, attracted by the light. They normally do no harm in the living rooms of a house, and as they take so long to develop they do not become a problem in the kitchen. Related articles Mealworm Beetle The yellow mealworm beetle…
Flour beetle
…with you from the nature. Appearance As like most other beetles, the flour beetle larva is larger than a fully grown flour beetle. A flour beetle is just 2.5-4 mm long. It has a reddish-brown color and a very long hind body. Like most other beetles, it has six legs and, of course, antennas on its head. If you are not sure of the species, it can be recognized by its lively behavior. Since the flour beetle is an insect, it has a larval stage. The fl…
(6) The cigarette beetle and the drugstore beetle
…ntries the drugstore beetle is at least 5 times as common as the cigarette beetle. The cigarette beetle requires a minimum temperature of 22 °C to survive. The drugstore beetle needs only 17 °C and it has the ability to withstand lower winter temperatures than the cigarette beetle. In Northern Europe, the cigarette beetle is forced to be strictly synanthrope while the drugstore beetle is not as strictly dependent on people. The drugstore beetle is…
Rape blossom beetle
…peseed fields – especially in spring rapeseed. Appearance The rape blossom beetle is a small gloss beetle of just two millimeters. Its color is dark with a metallic shine that is usually greenish. Biology and behavior When the temperatures are warm, you can experience the rape blossom beetle flying around in even very large numbers. Like many other insects, the beetle is attracted to yellow colors. If you are wearing yellow clothes, it is therefor…
Saw-toothed grain beetle
…serrated strips. The wings are fully developed, yet one never sees the saw-toothed grain beetle fly. The larvae are also small, they are only three to four mm long. The head of the larvae is dark, while the rest of the body is yellowish white. The beetle is often mistaken as the merchant grain beetle, as their appearance is similar. Biology and behavior In general, the saw-toothed lifetime is 6-10 month. They can however be up to three years old,…
Woodboring beetle
…r the Hadrobregmus pertinax. Its head is hidden under the neck shield. The larva is c-shaped and is white with yellow hairs. Biology and behavior To attract the females, the male makes a ticking sound, by banging his head against the woodwork. After mating, the female lays about 10 eggs, which are placed in cracks in the tree. The preferred cracks consist mainly of old fly holes or passages, where the newly hatched larvae will immediately drill in…
Exit-holes in timber
…are cylindrical (see p. 123). Death watch beetle exit-holes in timber Death-watch beetle The exit-holes have a diameter ol 3-5 mm. The larvae occur almost exclusively in oak damaged by damp, both in the sapwood and the heartwood. The faeces are large and lens-shaped (see p. 125). Fan bearing wood borer exit-holes in timber Fan-bearing wood-borer The exit-holes have a diameter of 0-1.5 mm. The larvae are found in the sapwood on deciduous trees. The…
(4) The rust-red flour beetle and the confused flour beetle
…he abrupt transition between the third and fourth antenna links of the rust-red flour beetle. The confused flour beetle has a smooth transition between the antenna links. The biology of the two species exhibits only small differences, but the differences are still significant enough to determine that one of the two species is successful while the other performs poorly in our climate. According to British statistics, the rust-red flour beetle is th…
Violet tanbark beetle
…he development from larva to adult violet tanbark beetle takes in average 1-2 years. When the larva is fully developed, it will gnaw a 3-5 cm long passage into the wood, thereafter it will pupate in an enlarged den. It will close the den with rough wood dust. When fully developed, the violet tanbark beetle will emerge through the same hole as the larva entered and chew an oval exit hole of 6x4mm. You can encounter this species in June and August,…
Index
…des canis Cu/ex pipiens Culicidae Culiseta annulata Davies’s Colletes Death-watch beetle Debris bug Delichon urbina Dendrobium pertinax Dendrocopus major Dermanyssus gallinae Dermatophagoides Dermestes frischi! Dermestes haemorrhoidalis Dermestes lardarius Dermestidae Dermestids larvae Devil’s coach-horse Dinoderus minutus. Diplopoda Dog flea Dog louse Dried currant moth Dronefly larva Drosophila funebris Drugstore beetle Dryocopus martinus Dry ro…
Wharf borer Beatle
…long. The larva has characteristics that make it different from many other beetle larvae. It has 3 pairs of well-developed feet at the breast area, just as it has warts on the third and fourth hind body joints. Biology and behavior If you want to see the adult wharf borer beetles, the chance of encountering them is greatest in the period from May to October. When the female searches for the perfect environment for her to lay her eggs, she goes exc…
Skin beetle
…d the female lays approx. 180 eggs distributed over the entire period. The beetles are not rod-bound to a specific area. They are, on the other hand, highly active and are willingly walking or flying far from their original home. A Dermestes haemorrhoidalis that has hatched in the wild can therefore easily search in through a window in a house. Damage A Dermestes haemorrhoidalis can be quite practical when it is out in nature. If, on the other han…
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