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| author | nfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org> | 2025-02-09 15:27:28 -0800 |
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| committer | nfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org> | 2025-02-09 15:27:28 -0800 |
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diff --git a/59377-0.txt b/59377-0.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..9de9bf5 --- /dev/null +++ b/59377-0.txt @@ -0,0 +1,543 @@ +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 59377 *** + + + + + + + + + + + + + Powder-post Beetles in Buildings + + What to Do About Them + + + by R. A. St. George and T. McIntyre + + + + + POWDER-POST BEETLES + + _in Buildings_ + + what to do about them + + [Illustration] + + + Leaflet No. 358 + + U.S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE + + + + +Powder-Post Beetles in Buildings + + + + +WHAT TO DO ABOUT THEM + + +Powder-post beetles cause extensive damage to wood in the structure of +buildings and to wood products used in homes. + +The larvae, or grubs, feed on the starch or the cellulose in wood. As +they feed, they bore irregular tunnels through the wood. Borings left +in the tunnels have the consistency of powder. + +Powder-post beetles can be controlled by applying an insecticide to the +infested wood. How it is applied depends on the kind of beetle to be +controlled and on the extent and location of the infestation. In some +circumstances a spray will suffice; in others, fumigation is necessary. + + +--------------------------------------------------------------+ + | | + | COMMON AND SCIENTIFIC NAMES OF INSECTS DISCUSSED | + | | + | Southern lyctus beetle _Lyctus planicollis_ | + | Common furniture beetle _Anobium punctatum_ | + | Death-watch beetle _Xestobium rufovillosum_ | + | Old house borer _Hylotrupes bajulus_ | + | Red-shouldered shothole borer _Xylobiops basilaris_ | + | Black-horned pine borer _Callidium antennatum_ | + | Bamboo powder-post beetle _Dinoderus minutus_ | + | Bamboo borer _Chlorophorus annularis_ | + | | + +--------------------------------------------------------------+ + + + + +KINDS + + +Powder-post beetles are divided into five groups--lyctus beetles, +anobiid beetles, bostrichid beetles, cerambycid beetles, and cossonid +weevils. + +Lyctus beetles are reddish to blackish, about 1/4 inch long, and +slightly flattened. One common species is known as the southern lyctus +beetle. + +Anobiid beetles are similar to lyctus beetles in color and size, but +are cylindrical. The common furniture beetle and the death-watch beetle +belong in this group. + +Bostrichid beetles are reddish, brown, or black; they are 1/8 to 3/4 +inch long, and cylindrical. + +The heads of anobiids and bostrichids are directed downward and are +covered by a "hood." + +The cerambycids, also known as roundheaded or long-horned beetles, +are blue, black, or pale yellow to reddish brown, and often bear +distinctive markings on the head or the wing covers. They are 1/2 to +1 inch long, and vary in shape. The old house borer belongs in this +group. It is black, and has grayish markings on the wing covers. It is +about 3/4 inch long. + +Cossonid weevils are reddish brown or black, 1/8 to 1/5 inch long, and +oval to cylindrical. Their heads are drawn out to form a short, broad +beak. Cossonids are the only weevils that infest wood; other weevils +infest grain or growing crops. + + + + +LIFE CYCLE + + +The adult females lay eggs on or in wood. The eggs hatch into larvae, +which develop as they tunnel the wood. The tunneling continues +throughout the larval stage, which lasts for months or years, depending +on the kind of beetle. + +The full-grown larvae transform to pupae, which become adult beetles. + +The adults of many kinds of powder-post beetles bore circular holes to +the surface of the wood and emerge; others make oval holes. Some emerge +in early spring; others, including the old house borer, emerge in early +summer. Mating and egg laying follow. + +The life cycle of lyctus beetles varies from 3 months to 1 year, +depending on the species and on regional differences in temperature, +moisture, and availability of wood of high food value. + +The life cycle of anobiid beetles is sometimes completed in about 1 +year and sometimes in 2 years. + +Most of the bostrichids and cerambycids complete the cycle in about +1 year, but a few of the latter require several years. The old house +borer, a cerambycid, requires 5 to 7 years in the North, and less time +in the South. In all but a few months of its life cycle, it is in the +larval stage. Larvae 3 or 4 years old are often found in the woodwork +of buildings only 1 or 2 years old--evidence that stored lumber is a +source of infestation. + +Cossonid weevils complete the cycle in about 1 year. + + + + +EGG LAYING + + +The females lay eggs on or in wood that satisfies their egg-laying +requirements and the food requirements of the larvae. These +requirements differ among the species. Hence different kinds of wood +are infested by different species of beetles. + +Lyctus beetles infest hardwoods. Cossonid weevils infest softwoods. +Some anobiids, bostrichids, and cerambycids infest hardwoods, and some +infest softwoods. + +For some species bark is an egg-laying requirement; for others it is +not. + +Some anobiids infest moist wood containing decay organisms, which +appear to aid development of the larvae. + +[Illustration: Adult of the southern lyctus beetle.] + +[Illustration: Adult of the old house borer.] + +[Illustration: Adult of the red-shouldered shothole borer, a bostrichid +beetle.] + +_Cover:_ Adult of an anobiid beetle, _Xyletinus peltatus_, and pine +sill damaged by larvae of this beetle. + +The porosity of the wood, the moisture content, the starch or cellulose +content--these also relate to egg laying. + +The adults of some species remain on the wood from which they emerge, +and reinfest it. Others crawl or fly to similar wood and attack it. + +A beetle may lay only a few eggs or as many as 60 or 70; the number +depends on the species of beetle and on the condition of the wood. + + +=Infestations in Hardwoods= + +Seasoned hardwoods.--Beetles that infest seasoned hardwoods +lay eggs on or in the wood from which they emerge. Hence the same wood +may be infested repeatedly. These beetles do not require bark for egg +laying. + +[Illustration: Oak board damaged by larvae of the southern lyctus +beetle.] + +Lyctus beetles lay eggs in exposed pores in the sapwood of oak, ash, +hickory, walnut, pecan, gum, persimmon, maple, cherry, and a few other +hardwood species. The larvae are found in hardwood flooring, furniture, +picture frames, and trim. + +Anobiid and cerambycid beetles lay eggs in crevices on the surface of +the wood; cerambycids also lay eggs in emergence holes. + +Bostrichid beetles that bore into seasoned hardwoods often bore +chambers at the sides of their tunnels and lay eggs in them. + +Unseasoned hardwoods.--Bostrichids that infest green and +seasoning hardwoods lay eggs in pores leading from the entrance +tunnels. The red-shouldered shothole borer is one of these. Bostrichids +frequently attack bark-covered wood. They usually do not reinfest the +wood from which they emerge. + + +=Infestations in Softwoods= + +Seasoned softwoods.--Some kinds of beetles infest seasoned +softwood lumber used in the structure of buildings. + +Certain of the bostrichids require bark for egg laying. They infest +lumber that has bark on the edges. Such lumber is often used in +framing, subflooring, and roofing. The females lay eggs in the bark. +The larvae of some species complete their development in it; others go +to the adjacent wood to do so. The adult females may reinfest the wood +from which they emerge. + +Other beetles that infest seasoned softwoods do not require bark +for egg laying. Among them are the old house borer and the cossonid +weevils. The females lay eggs in crevices in the wood. They may infest +the same wood repeatedly. + +The old house borer infests framing and subflooring. It is found in old +and new construction and in stored lumber. Cossonid weevils are found +in pine flooring, baseboards, wall stops, and roof trusses. + +Unseasoned softwoods.--The beetles that infest green and +seasoning softwoods include several cerambycids--for example, the +black-horned pine borer--and a few bostrichids. Most of these beetles +require bark for egg laying. The adult females usually do not reinfest +the wood from which they emerge; they seek other unseasoned wood and +lay eggs in the bark. + +[Illustration: Larva of the old house borer. Enlarged about 5×.] + + +=Infestations in Bamboo= + +Certain species of bostrichid, cerambycid, and lyctus beetles infest +bamboo products such as furniture. Venetian blinds, draw drapes, +baskets, fans, and fishing poles. + +Plant-quarantine inspectors at United States ports of entry often +intercept the beetles in bamboo products imported from the Far East. +Among the beetles intercepted are the bamboo powder-post beetle, a +bostrichid, and the bamboo borer, a cerambycid. These beetles and the +lyctus beetles may reinfest the material from which they emerge. + +[Illustration: Pine floor joist damaged by larvae of the old house +borer] + + + + +DAMAGE + + +The increase in building activity that followed World War II brought +the destructiveness of powder-post beetles to widespread attention. The +more buildings, the more damage. + +The old house borer is rapidly spreading over the eastern half of +the United States, and is found more and more in lumber used in new +construction. It is becoming one of the most serious pests of wood in +buildings. + +Powder-post beetles damage wood by tunneling and by cutting surface +holes. + +Tunneling is done by the larvae of all kinds of powder-post beetles, +and by adult bostrichids and cossonid weevils. The larvae of anobiid +beetles leave elongate pellets of excreted wood in their tunnels. +Other larvae leave powderlike borings. Severely damaged wood becomes a +crumbly mass of pellets or of borings, and sometimes has a honeycombed +appearance. + +Since the insects do most of their tunneling in sapwood, structural +damage is rare in large timbers. + +Surface holes mar the appearance of wood. Those most commonly seen are +made by adult beetles when they emerge from the wood. Those made by +many of the smaller beetles are about 1/8 inch in diameter. They give +wood the appearance of having been hit by buckshot, and are called +shotholes. Larger beetles make holes 1/4 to 3/8 inch in diameter. + +Emergence holes made by the old house borer are oval. The lengthwise +measurement is about 1/4 inch. + +The larvae of some species, including the lyctus beetles, make holes to +the surface of the wood and expel borings through them. The larvae of +the old house borer seldom pierce the surface; they pack their borings +behind them. + + + + +DETECTION + + +Aside from observing tunneled wood, there are several ways of detecting +powder-post beetle damage. + +You may see surface holes, or borings that have been ejected from them. +The borings may be in piles near the holes or, where timbers overhead +are attacked, they may be on the floor below. + +You may see adult beetles crawling on the wood. + +In quiet surroundings you may hear a rasping or ticking sound that is +made by tunneling larvae. This is the best way to detect larvae of the +old house borer. Their ticking is sometimes audible several feet from +where they are working. By determining the source of the sound and +by probing the wood with a sharp tool, you can locate the tunnels. A +further aid is to look for blistered wood. + +Sometimes the larvae of cerambycid beetles can be heard working beneath +bark on green or partially seasoned wood. They frequently are found in +firewood. They resemble the old house borer, but they have different +habits and do not infest seasoned wood. When the adults emerge, +they seek more green wood to attack. If they cannot escape from the +building, they die in a few days. + + + + +WHAT TO DO + + +Consider whether the control problem is one that you can handle +yourself or whether it is one that requires the services of a +pest-control operator. + +If you have a severe infestation, or one that is behind paneled or +plastered walls, or in some other hard-to-reach place, it may be that +only an experienced pest-control operator with the proper equipment can +do a satisfactory job. + +If the infestation is light and easy to reach, you may be able to +handle the control job yourself. Spraying or brush-coating the wood +with an insecticide may suffice. + +If wood has been so badly damaged that its structural strength is +impaired, it should be replaced. Coordinate the repair work with the +control work. + + +=Spraying or Brushing= + +Beetles that make numerous small holes in the surface of wood are +controlled by saturating the wood with a deodorized kerosene, such as +deobase or ultrasene, which contains either 5 percent DDT, 2 percent +chlordane, 0.5 percent dieldrin, or 0.5 percent lindane. + +With 1 gallon of any of these materials you can treat at least 100 +square feet of wood surface. Use no more of the material in a single +application than is needed to wet the surface. Repeat the application +until the wood is saturated. Apply with a garden sprayer or a +paintbrush. + +The treatment is also effective against infestations in furniture and +other wood products. + +For best results in treating any kind of material, first remove the +finish. This is especially desirable when you treat a large area, such +as a floor, but it may not be desirable when you treat ornamental +products. Where an infestation in a floor is so small that removal of +the finish is undesirable, go ahead and treat the floor, but do not +walk on it until it has dried. The drying takes several hours. + +The old house borer and other beetles that do not make entrance +holes in the surface of the wood can also be controlled by surface +applications of these chemicals. Larger quantities must be used, +however, especially where thicker wood is concerned, such as floor +joists, studs, and roof rafters. For such materials, at least 1.5 +pints of the insecticide per cubic foot of wood is needed to reach the +beetle larvae. This is equivalent to treating the exposed surfaces of 7 +linear feet of a 2- by 10-inch floor joist, 12 feet of a 2- by 6-inch +roof rafter, 18 feet of 2- by 4-inch studding, or 12 square feet of +subflooring. Even with this thorough treatment, it may take from 3 +weeks to 3 months before all the larvae are reached and killed. + +The homeowner can best apply such a quantity of insecticide by using +a sprayer or a pint-size plastic wash bottle of the squeeze type, +equipped with a tube that will produce a pinpoint stream. This makes it +possible to apply small enough quantities to cover the surface without +causing the liquid to run off. Repeated applications at different +times are necessary for complete absorption by the wood and effective +penetration. A pest-control operator can obtain results quickly by +injecting the chemical under pressure through boreholes spaced at short +intervals in the infested wood. + + +=Slow-Diffusion Method= + +Where pressure equipment is not available and you want to use the +bore-hole or slow-diffusion method on isolated infestations in wood +that is readily accessible, you can use the following procedure: + +1. Bore a downslanting hole about 1/2 inch in diameter and 1 inch deep +into the wood near the place where a larva is working. + +2. Insert a tight-fitting metal or glass tube in the hole. Let about +1/4 inch of the tube project. + +3. Place one end of a rubber tube over the projecting portion of the +metal or glass tube, and connect the other end with a funnel. The +funnel should be supported so that it will stay in place until the +treatment has been completed. + +4. Pour insecticide into the funnel. Use any of the preparations +mentioned in the discussion of spraying and brushing. Leave the +equipment in place about 48 hours, or until the insecticide is taken +up. The insecticide flows into the infested wood, is absorbed for a +distance of several inches around the hole, and reaches and kills the +larva. + +If several larvae are working in places as much as 18 inches apart, +individual treatment is needed. + + +=Fumigation= + +Treatment of a heavy infestation of powder-post beetles by spraying +or brushing or by the slow-diffusion method is impractical where the +wood is hard to reach; particularly when it is located behind plastered +walls or covered by paneling or insulation. + +Such an infestation can be controlled by fumigation--_but this work +must be done by a licensed fumigator_. + +Hydrocyanic acid gas or methyl bromide gas is used in fumigating. Each +is very poisonous, and heavy dosages have to be used. + +After fumigation, the building must be aired to make it safe for +reoccupancy. The fumigating and the airing require 2 to 4 days. + +Fumigation methods of the "home-remedy" type--such as burning sulfur +candles--are ineffective because the fumigant does not penetrate the +infested wood. + + + + +PRECAUTIONS + + +The insecticides mentioned in this leaflet are poisonous to people and +to animals. Keep them where children and pets cannot reach them. Do not +let them come in contact with the body. When applying them, wear rubber +gloves, a cellulose acetate type of face-guard, and a rubber or leather +apron. When spraying an overhead area, do not stand directly under it. + +Guarding against explosions.--Apply a coarse spray. It is +effective and safe to use. A concentrated fine mist is ineffective and +may explode in the presence of a spark or flame. Do not smoke while +spraying. Shut off pilot lights. + +Pressure.--In spraying, use only enough pressure to wet the +surface of the wood. Too much pressure may cause spray to splash onto +the body. If you apply the insecticide in an enclosed place, make sure +that the air can circulate freely. Keep doors and windows open; if +necessary, use a fan. The purpose is to prevent odors from accumulating +in the building. + +If you treat a floor that has a finished ceiling under it--for example, +the floor of a second-story room--avoid applying too much material. If +you do, it may run through to the ceiling and cause a stain. Removal of +the floor finish before applying the insecticide makes it unnecessary +to apply a large amount; the wood absorbs most of it. + +If you apply the oil solution to parquet flooring, do it very lightly. +If you apply too much, the oil may dissolve the asphalt in which the +flooring is set. The dissolved asphalt may stain the floor. Around the +edges of the floor, it may "creep up" and damage the walls. + +If you have applied insecticide with a garden sprayer, rinse out the +tank and hose before putting the sprayer away. This prevents the +gaskets from shriveling and keeps oil from getting on plants the next +time the sprayer is used in the garden. + +Food cabinets.--In treating a food cabinet, do not use an +insecticide because it might contaminate food. Use deodorized kerosene +alone. It has little odor and evaporates quickly. Take the cabinet +outdoors to treat it, and leave it there until the kerosene odor +disappears. + +Fumigation.--The fact that fumigation work must be done by a +licensed operator is stated on page 7. + +Only isolated buildings can be safely fumigated. If an apartment, a +row house, or part of a duplex were fumigated, the gas might penetrate +walls and kill persons in an adjoining unit. + +Methyl bromide gas is odorless, but in the presence of articles having +a high sulfur content, or containing animal matter, sponge rubber, or +iodized salt, a chemical change takes place and a garliclike odor is +apt to be given off later. Before this gas is used, see whether such +articles are in the building; if they are, remove them. This need not +be done if hydrocyanic acid gas is used. However, hydrocyanic acid gas +tarnishes silver and spoils unexposed photographic film; before it is +used, remove silver and film. + + + + Prepared by R. A. St. George and T. McIntyre, entomologists, + + Division of Forest insect Research, Forest Service + + Washington, D.C. · Revised November 1959 + + + U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE: 1959 + + + + For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government + Printing Office Washington 25, D.C. - Price 5 cents + + + + +Transcriber Note + + +Illustrations moved to prevent splitting paragraphs. + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of USDA Leaflet 358: Powder-Post Beetles +in Buildings, by R. A. St. John and T. McIntyre + +*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 59377 *** |
