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Warehouse Moth
Common Name | Warehouse moth (Cacao Moth, Tobacco Moth) |
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Scientific Name | Ephestia elutella | |
Size | 7-9 mm in length The adult tobacco moth is a small, gray moth about 3/8 of an inch long, with a 5/8 inch wingspread. |
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Description |
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Habitat |
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Lifecycle | One to six months![]() Eggs - Up to 270 eggs laid on or near produce. Larvae - Move to and over produce, feeding and spinning threads that can form webs. Pupae - Form in cracks nearby. Adults - Non feeding; short lived; fly particularly at dawn and dusk toward top or roof of store Cycle: Females lay eggs in and around potential food sources. |
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Type of Damage |
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Sources / Breeding | Widely distributed throughout temperate regions. It is rarely
imported except on products from other temperate areas. A major pest of warehouses and, more recently, retail premises. This species will infest cereals, fruit, shelled nuts, cocoa beans, fish, spices and tobacco. In the case of tobacco, "sweet" varieties are preferred and entire interveinal leaf areas may be destroyed. Moth infestations are especially serious where wheat and flour are stored in bulk, although they seldom infest goods that are stored in silos |
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Prevention and Control | Controlling established insect infestations is difficult, he says,
so prevention is very important. The most important step in![]() “Before tobacco is placed in storage, prepare a clean storage area. Clean out and burn all tobacco and debris from the storage area. Plant trash remaining in the storage area might harbour insects that can move to the tobacco.” To help prevent tobacco moth infestations, Moore recommends treating with Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt). “Apply a fine spray to loose tobacco as it is being sheeted. It's very hard to repack sheets and get the good coverage required. One suggestion might be to apply Bt as a fine mist as the tobacco is sent through a conditioning cylinder or tumbler.” Stored tobacco should be checked every two to four weeks during the fall and winter for signs of insects and for new damage, he says. If tobacco moths are found, they should be treated with Bt. “Treating the outside
of piles and/or the sheets probably will not control an established
infestation. Piles must be taken apart and the tobacco treated as loose
leaves before re-sheeting. Sheets also may be treated.” |
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