Indianmeal Moth
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Hammond & Lemmons>ID-A_Bug 4>Indianmeal Moth

 

COMMON NAME:

SCIENTIFIC NAME:

CLASS/ORDER/FAMILY:

METAMORPHOSIS:

Indianmeal moth

Plodia interpunctella (Hubner)

Insecta/Lepidoptera/Pyralidae

Complete

Indianmeal_Moth.jpg

INTRODUCTION. The Indianmeal moth was given its common name by an early American entomologist (Asa Fitch) who found it feeding on cornmeal (Indian meal).  It is probably the most important and most commonly encourntered pest of stored products found in the home and in grocery stores in the Unit States.  Of Old World origin, it is now found worldwide.

RECOGNITION. Adults with wingspread (wing tip to wing tip) about 5/8-3/4in (16-20 mm).  Wings pale gray but front wing with outer 2/3s reddish brown with a coppery luster.

     Mature larva usually about 1/2in (range 9-19 mm) long.  Usually dirty white but color may vary to a greenish or pinkish or brownish hue depending on its food, with head and prothorzcic plate/sheild yellowish brown to reddish brown.  With 5 pairs of well-developed prolegs on abdomen and each bearing crochets (hooks).  Prespiracular tubercle (wartlike area between spiracle and front edge of segment) of prothorax with 2 setae (hairs). Tubercle VI on mesothorax (wartlike area near and above leg) with 1 setae (hair).  Body without pinnacula (dark or pale wartlike area at base of hairs or setae) on mesothorax, metathorax, and 1st 9 abdominal segments.  Rim around spiracles of about even thickness.

HABITS. The adults cause no damage.  The larvae are surface feeders and generally produce a lot of webbing throughout the infested part of materials.  They are general feeders and attack grain and grain products, a wide variety of fried fruits, seeds, nuts, graham crackers, powdered milk, biscuits, chocolate, candies, dried red peppers, dry dog food, and bird seed.  They are very destructive wherever dried fruits are stored.  Preferred are the coarser grades of flour such as whole wheat, graham flour, and cornmeal, but they can breed in shelled or ear corn.

     When the larvae wander about looking for pupation sites in homes,  they are often mistaken for clothes moth larvae.  Likewise, when the moths are flying, they are also mistaken for clothes moths.

     Adults are attracted to light.

 

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