Mediterranean flour moth

  • Taxonomy

    Scientific name : Ephestia kuehniella Zeller
    Order : Lepidoptera
    Classification : Secondary

  • Infested products

    Wheat flour; grain stored in bulk (surface layers). Can feed on dead insects.

  • Geographical distribution

    Worldwide, but uncommon in tropical regions.

  • NOX STORAGE Mediterranean flour moth [Ephestia kuehniella Zeller] Image 1
  • NOX STORAGE Mediterranean flour moth [Ephestia kuehniella Zeller] Image 2
  • NOX STORAGE Mediterranean flour moth [Ephestia kuehniella Zeller] Image 3
  • NOX STORAGE Mediterranean flour moth [Ephestia kuehniella Zeller] Image 4
  • Description

    Mediterranean flour moth (Ephestia kuehniella Zeller). Adults (imagines) are relatively large, with a wingspan of 20–25 mm and body length of 9–12 mm. Forewings are grey, bearing scattered brown and white markings; labial palps are distinctly upcurved. Larvae (caterpillars) are whitish to pinkish, reaching about 20 mm at maturity; the head capsule is conspicuous. Each primary seta arises from a dark pinaculum at its base, giving the integument a finely speckled aspect.

  • Damages

    Damage arises exclusively from the larval stage; adults do not feed. Larvae attack whole kernels and milled products, preferentially consuming the bran and germ, lowering test weight, fat reserves, and seed viability. Feeding, frass, and copious silk yield dense webbing and clumped masses that contaminate grain, trap fines, and foul screens. Webbing obstructs conveyors, bucket elevators (legs), and augers, and impedes aeration. The silk mats promote condensation, creating moisture pockets and hotspots that favor mycotoxigenic mold development. Typical signs include caking, off‑odors, webbed galleries with cast skins, and downgrading of lots. Losses stem from direct kernel injury, reduced milling yield, and elevated spoilage risk.

  • Detection

    Key signs of Mediterranean flour moth infestation in stored grain (Ephestia kuehniella Zeller): - Larval feeding injury: abraded kernels, surface perforations, hollowed grains, and excess “floury” fines from grazing. - Silken webbing: dense larval webbing and silken galleries matting the grain surface, creating a webby crust; kernels and fines clump/cake together. - Frass and debris: powdery frass mixed with fines, with larval exuviae (cast skins) and shed head capsules. - Live stages: cream to greyish larvae with dark head capsule and conspicuous pinacula; pupae in loose silken cocoons on bag seams, walls, or under lids. - Adults: small grey pyralid moths with wavy transverse wing lines, resting roof-like; adults may flutter near lights, hatches, and discharge points at dusk. - Secondary effects: musty/sweet off-odors, localized heating and mold growth where webbing is heavy. - Handling issues: webbed clumps causing flow obstruction in spouts, augers, and on conveyor transfer points.

  • Life cycle

    Mediterranean flour moth, Ephestia kuehniella (Zeller), completes a holometabolous cycle tailored to stored grain and milled products. Soon after emergence, adults (imagines) mate and females oviposit on floury residues and grain dust. Adults are crepuscular—most active at dawn and dusk—and rest by day. Eggs hatch into larvae that pass through several instars, feeding within the commodity while spinning silken webbing that binds kernels and fouls machinery. When mature, caterpillars leave the food mass to find sheltered sites on walls or packaging, spin a cocoon, and pupate. The pupa yields short-lived, largely non-feeding adults. In warm stores, development is continuous; cooler conditions slow it and may induce larval diapause.

  • Environment

    Ephestia kuehniella (Mediterranean flour moth) is a synanthropic stored-product lepidopteran favoring cool indoor sites—mills, processing plants, warehouses, and homes. Overwinters in unheated facilities; stressed at >30°C.

  • Similar species

    Brown house moth (Hofmannophila pseudospretella) Almond moth (Cadra cautella)

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