The adult larder beetle is about 1 3 of an inch in length.
Larder beetles in carpet.
The wings are covered in small yellow hairs.
While they can harm home support.
Larder beetles enter homes through open doors or cracks in walls during the late summer and fall to escape cold weather.
If you find something that looks similar but is smaller grain of rice size it s more likely a carpet beetle both insects are a bummer to be infested by.
Larder beetles really common in homes especially during the colder months since they search out warmer living arrangements like most bugs when the deep freeze of nature rolls around.
The adult larder beetle is brown colored and has a light to yellowish mark on the midsection of their bodies.
All three belong to the insect family called dermestidae and are related to carpet beetles a more common group of indoor insect pests.
Larder beetles overwinter as adults in protected places.
Their name comes from the practice of ages past where before refrigeration households had larders to store cured meats cheeses and the like along with other.
The larvae have two small pincers at the end of their body.
Close relatives of the larder beetle are used to clean the flesh from skeletons used in museums.
When larder beetles gather in hundreds or thousands damage can become significant.
Larder beetles get their names from the place they are often found in your larder which is an old word for your pantry or cupboard where you store food especially grains and meat.
Larder beetles are a type of carpet beetle but they only attack woolens that have been soiled with blood fish oils or other high protein stains.
How serious are larder beetles.
Larder beetles and their larvae are not tiny really the larvae range from 3 4 to almost an inch in length.
They overwinter near food sources particularly in kitchen pantries.
The larder beetle larvae are about an inch in length.
Black carpet beetle larvae.
One of the more commonly encountered species in homes is the larder beetle dermestes.
Three of the most common species the hide larder and black larder beetles are known scientifically as dermestes maculatus dermestes lardarius and dermestes ater.