American Spider Beetle Bean Weevil
Cigarette Beetle Cowpea Weevil
Dried Fruit Beetle Drugstore Beetle
Foreign Grain Beetles Indian Meal Moth
Larder Beetle Mediterranean Flour Moth
Red or Confused Flour Beetle Rice & Granary Weevils
Sawtoothed & Merchant Grain Beetles Shiny Spider Beetle
Warehouse & Cabinet Beetles  

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Larder Beetle Dermestes lardarius

Size:

1/4 to 1/2 inch

Color:

Dark brown to black with pale, yellow six-spotted band across front half of wing covers. The underside and legs are covered with fine yellow hairs.

Behavior:

The genus name "Dermestes" comes from Greek and means “to devour a skin.” Adult larder beetles are often found outside overwintering in crevices of bark. In late spring or early summer, they may enter structures seeking a food source on which to deposit eggs. The eggs are generally laid directly on the food source although they may be deposited into nearby crevices. Egg laying lasts 2-3 months through the summer and a single female deposits as many as 200 to 800 eggs. The eggs hatch within 12 days and the larvae feed continuously on their food source, preferring those with some fat or oil content. They will, however, feed on dead cluster flies and other insects inside attics or walls. They may also be found in the dead insect accumulations in the bottom of insect light traps. Although larder beetle larvae are active and fairly agile, they become immobile if disturbed and “play possum” until the danger has passed. The larvae have strong mandibles and have been observed to bore into both hard and soft woods and even lead. Larvae molt up to six times before pupating. The mature larvae wander from the food source and may bore into anything in the immediate vicinity to find a site to pupate. The entire life cycle may be completed within 40 to 50 days under suitable conditions.