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Common Carpet Beetle

Common Carpet Beetle

General Description

·  Adults of this carpet beetle are small, rounded, and gray to blackish in color with white and orange scales on the back.

·  Orange-red band of scales are found on the middle of the back surface.

 

Credit: Natasha Wright,bugwood.org.

 

 

· The larva is an elongated, oval shape and is rarely more than 0.6 cm long.

· Larvae are reddish brown and covered with numerous black or brown hairs.

· Eggs are white.

 

Credit: Joseph Berger, bugwood.org.

 

 

Life Cycle and Common Characteristics

  • Adult beetles feed on nectar and pollen in flowers.
  • Each female deposit 30 to 40 small.
  • Eggs hatch in 10 to 20 days.
    The larva molts 6 times over a period of 60 to 70 days.
  • Pupation occurs in the last larval skin.
    The pupal stage lasts for 12 to 15 days.
  • The adult remains in the old larval skin for about 18 days before becoming active.

Damage and Economic & Health Implications

  • Larvae of this beetle often cause damage to carpets, textiles, fabrics, furs, feathers, museum specimens and similar materials.
  • This beetle may cause dermatitis (skin irritation) when human skin comes in contact with shed larval skins.
  • Damages on infested items as irregular holes. In museum damaged specimens are eaten by the larvae which they leave a fine dust around or beneath the specimen.