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The cigarette beetle feeds on a variety of stored
products such as paprika, chili, and dried dog food. Both adults and
larvae are capable of readily penetrating many types of packaging
material These destructive pests can feed on pyrethrum powder strong
enough to kill cockroaches. Adults are strong fliers and are
attracted to light at night. Adult beetles flying around lights at
night are often the first indication of their presence. The
cigarette beetle is native to Egypt. In fact, a beetle was found in
King Tutankhamen's tomb! In the 3,500 years since then the beetle
has hardly changed.
The adult cigarette beetle is a small, red-brown to
yellowish-brown beetle. When viewed from above it appears oval, and
in profile humpbacked in shape (the head and pronotum are bent
forward). It is 3 to 4 mm (1/10 to 1/8 inch) long. The antennae are
serrate (the side edge of each antennal segment is pointed like a
saw tooth). The wing coverings (elytra) are smooth without
longitudinal grooves. They are strong fliers and attracted to light
at night such as a lamp or TV set. It can be found throughout the
year, but seems to be more common in the fall and winter months. The
eggs are white, oval and too small to be easily seen with the naked
eye. The larvae are white and grub-like; long hairs cover the bodies
of the larvae and give them a fuzzy appearance. When full grown they
are about 4 mm (1/8 inch) long. Larvae spin themselves into a cocoon
prior to becoming pupae.
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Adult cigarette beetle
(University of Florida Cooperative
Extension) |
Both adults and larvae are capable of readily
penetrating many types of packaging material. Adults lay their eggs
on the food material the larvae are to feed on. Adults live two to
four weeks. Females lay up to 100 eggs; the development time from
egg to adult is six to eight weeks. There are three to six
generations/year. The minimum development temperature is 65 degrees
F.
Cigarette beetles will infest a wide variety of
food products:
Plant material - Aniseed, bamboo, beans, biscuits,
cassava, chickpeas, cigars, cigarettes, cocoa beans, coffee beans,
copra, coriander, cottonseed (before and after harvest), cottonseed
meal, cumin, dates, dogfood, dried banana, dried cabbage, dried
carrot, dried fruits, drugs, flax tow, flour, ginger, grain, herbs,
herbarium specimens, insecticides containing pyrethrum, juniper
seed, licorice root, paprika, peanuts, rhubarb, rice, seeds of
various trees and plants, spices, and yeast.
Other food materials include dried insects, dried
fish, fishmeal, and meatmeal. The cigarette beetle has also been
recorded attacking leather, furniture stuffing, and bookbinders
paste. It has also done incidental damage to cloth upholstery and
paper books.
The cigarette beetle can be controlled without the
use of pesticides. The first step in control of the cigarette beetle
is to find the source of the infestation. This means inspecting all
of the dried foods in the infested cabinets or drawers. Once the
infested material is found, it should be destroyed. Clean all the
cabinets and drawers with a vacuum cleaner (then throw the cleaner
bag away). It is important that susceptible food material be stored
so that adults and larvae may not have access to it. Glass jars and
plastic containers with air tight covers effectively keep food
insect-free. Infestations observed on food stored in either type of
storage container are trapped and unable to spread to other food
items. Susceptible food items need to be tightly contained or stored
in the refrigerator or freezer, or be consumed within two to three
weeks of purchase. Infestations of dried flowers may be "fumigated"
by placing a small amount of moth crystals and the flowers in a
plastic bag for a day or two.
Adapted from the
Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station and the Virginia
Cooperative Extension, 1999.

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