Drugstore beetle

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Adult drugstore beetle Stegobium paniceum

Description

A dark, reddish-brown beetle, Stegobium paniceum. The drugstore beetle larvae specializes in eating leather and adjacent textiles. They will also eat botanical specimens, seeds, spices, stored food, books, cork, and mummies. The adult insects are about 2 to 4 millimeters long. Females lay about 75 eggs that hatch in 7 to 12 days. The larvae, which feed on protein based materials, have a white c-shaped body growing up to 4 mm in length. The larval stage lasts 4-20 weeks at which point a cocoon is formed. The adult hatches in 1-3 weeks and lives up to 65 days. Stegobinone has been identified as an effective sex pheromone.

Drugstore beetle

Synonyms and Related Terms

Stegobium paniceum; biscuit beetle (Br.)

Other Properties

Distribution: woldwide, most abundant in temperate regions

Additional Information

º MuseumPests.net: http://www.museumpests.net/pdfholder/24image.pdf Drugstore Beetleº University of Florida, Department of Entomology and Nematology: Drugstore beetle

Additional Images


Authority

  • Lynda A. Zycherman, J.Richard Schrock, A Guide to Museum Pest Control, FAIC and Association of Systematics Collections, Washington DC, 1988 Comment: Larval stage = 5-7 weeks
  • Rosalie Rosso King, Textile Identification, Conservation, and Preservation, Noyes Publications, Park Ridge, NJ, 1985

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