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Lyctid

True Powderpost Beetle

Lyctid

These beetles grow and feed on hardwoods, where they lay their eggs in the wood and the larvae feed and destroy it.
RISK LEVEL:
LOW
MEDIUM
HIGH
Risk is defined as how much damage each pest can be to you, your family, or your home
Class: Order: Family:
Insecta Coleoptera Lyctidae
Size: True powder post beetle (lyctid) adults are 1/32 to 1/4 in (1-7 mm) long, depending on species. Larvae are up to 1/4 in (6 mm) long.
Color: Adult true powderpost beetle is reddish brown to black. Larva is nearly white.
Characteristics: Adult has a long, narrow, flat body with sides almost parallel; head and often jaws can be seen in top view; antennae with 2-segmented clubs; wing covers are often with rows of hairs. Larva is C-shaped, with enlarged thorax, short 4-segmented antennae, and legs with long claw.
Geographic Range: Around the world; about 11 species in the United States.
Food: True powderpost beetles are a wood destroying insect and eat wood cell contents: mostly starch, with some sugar and protein.
Biology: Adult powderpost beetles (lyctids) are active at night, fly well, and are attracted to light. Female lays (15-50) eggs in exposed wood pores, cracks and crevices, but never on wood that is painted, polished or waxed. The larvae tunnel in sapwood, along the grain, packing their tunnels loosely with very fine, powdery, flour-like dust. After several molts (2-9 months), the mature larva bores back to near the surface to build a chamber and pupate. The adult bores out to the surface to exit, and mates, doing very little feeding. Development time from egg to adult is 9-12 months, but can be as little as 3-4 months, or as long as a few years.
  • Round exit holes, diameter 1/32-1/16 in (0.8-1.6 mm)
  • Piles of very fine powdery dust, which falls easily from holes, as it is not packed tightly in.
  • Presence of emerging adults during late winter/early spring (then eggs are laid, and larvae begin to bore through the wood.)
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