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Stored Food Pests

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Title: Stored Food Pests


1
Stored Food Pests
  • Modified from
  • urbanprinciples.ifas.ufl.edu/stored food pests.ppt

2
Stored food pests
  • 80 of human food comes from grains
  • 12 of harvest is lost to insects before harvest
  • another 36 is lost after harvest to insects
  • overall total food losses due to pests are about
    50 destruction

3
Two Pest Categories
  • Primary Cause initial injury
  • Secondary Take advantage of injury.

4
Types of losses due to pests
  • Direct
  • Indirect

5
Direct losses
  • Actual consumption
  • loss of weight,
  • loss of nutrients,
  • lower germination,
  • reduced grade
  • lower market value
  • Contamination
  • Damage to structures or containers

6
Indirect losses
  • wet grain heating
  • bacteria
  • fungi
  • alflatoxins
  • parasites of humans
  • control and application costs
  • excessive pesticide residues
  • loss of consumer confidence

7
Food contamination
  • Insect infestation results in grain damage that
    cannot be repaired
  • Food defect action levels set FDA standards for
    insect contamination
  • Food exceeding those levels cannot be mixed with
    un-infested food to reduce levels of
    contamination
  • Food processors can be fined or sent to jail for
    infestations found during inspections

8
Food Defect Action Levels
  • Apple Butter
  • Insect Filth Ave. of 5 or more whole or
    equivalent insects (not counting mites, aphids,
    thrips, or scale insects) per 100 g of apple
    butter
  • Rodent Filth Ave. of 4 or more rodent hairs per
    100 g sample
  • Significance Aesthetic

9
Food Action Defect Levels
  • Cherries, fresh, canned or frozen
  • Insect Filth
  • Avg. of 4 or more pieces are rejects due to
    insects other than maggots
  • Wheat Flour
  • Insect Filth Ave of 75 or more insect fragments
    per 50 g

10
Management of Stored Food Pests
Objective Prevent contamination from causing
rejection
  • Monitor Pest Population
  • Control through non-chemical means if possible
  • Use Chemicals as a last resort (they can cause
    rejection too).

11
Inspection and monitoring
  • Survey areas where insect pests can enter
    facility
  • Windows and doors should be tight to prevent
    entry when closed
  • Vegetation (fruit and nut trees) can cause pests
    to proliferate close to the building
  • Weeds can provide harborage

12
Monitoring
  • Light traps
  • commonly used to trap flies,
  • can be used to monitor flying stored product
    insects also
  • Probe traps-- inserted into infested commodity to
    trap insects

Flanders, K
13
Pheromone Trap
14
Trapping
  • Traps for all but flour beetles should be placed
    about 6 feet up. Flour beetle traps should be
    placed level on floor or shelves
  • Place traps in grid pattern 25-50 feet apart
  • Do not place close to windows and doors to
    prevent luring insects into facility
  • Pinpoint problem areas, then visually inspect to
    find infestation
  • Routinely service to replace attractants and
    clean or change sticky traps
  • Lures are effective for two months after this
    they should be replaced with new ones.

15
Information from Trapping
  • Monitoringnew introductions, isolate current
    problems
  • Looking at setae on back of a beetle, can
    determine food it was in.

16
Other Rules of Thumb
  • A warehouse may be 1 million cubic feet
  • Trap placement
  • 1/30,000 ft3 (average)
  • 1/10,000 ft3 (critical)
  • 1/100,000 (non-critical)

17
Monitoring
  • Sex pheromone produced by
  • Various Moths
  • Anobiid beetles
  • Dermestid beetles
  • Sources
  • Insects Limited
  • Trece
  • Whitmire
  • Moth volatile

18
Monitoring
  • Aggregation pheromone
  • produced by many flour beetles and grain beetles.
  • Both males and females respond to the lures

19
Indian meal moth pheromones
  • adults up to 13 mm,
  • bicolored wings, inner half light colored, outer
    half coppery
  • feeds on almost any stored food but especially is
    found in stored nuts, grain, dried fruit, and pet
    food
  • traps contain hangers, traps, lures, and sticky
    paper

20
Red and confused flour beetle pheromone
  • adults up to 4.4 mm, dark reddish and somewhat
    flattened
  • feed on flours, cereals, debris, cocoa, fruits,
    and vegetable products
  • traps contain traps, oil dispensers, oil pads,
    and lures

21
Cigarette beetles
  • adults up to 5 mm, brown to reddish with the head
    tucked under pronotum
  • attacks most stored food including tobacco
  • hanging traps have hangers, traps, lures
  • floor traps have stations and lures

22
Sawtoothed grain beetle
  • adults up to 3.25 mm, elongated and flattened,
    toothlike projections on side of pronotum
  • enter many sealed containers
  • same trap as flour beetle trap but with
    sawtoothed grain beetle attractant

23
Angoumois grain moth
  • adult wingspan up to 19 mm pale yellow forewings
    and gray pointed hindwings
  • attacks whole grains
  • hanging trap includes traps, hangers, and lures

24
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25
The trick to traps . . .
  • Wheres the plume?
  • Things that influence the pheromone plume
  • Air handling system
  • HVAC, positive pressure
  • High use during summer and winter
  • Sends pheromone up and out of building if hung
    too high
  • But if you hang the trap too low, the
    distribution of the pheromone will be poor and
    affect trap catch

/lancaster.unl.edu
26
IPM Management Tactics
  • Non-chemical control
  • Sanitation
  • Physical
  • Cultural
  • Many of the non-chemical control methods are
    PREVENTATIVE
  • Biological Control ?

27
IPM Management Tactics
  • Judicious use of insecticides
  • Examples of treatment plans, associated
    application equipment, formulations available and
    some products

28
Common Facilities with Stored Product Pests
  • Warehouses
  • Stores
  • Homes
  • Bins will be covered in the lab

29
General Principles for an IPM Program
  • Inspect incoming material (prevention) is the
    first line of defense against most stored product
    insects.

30
Inspect rail cars and trucks for spilled food and
infestations
www.bulkwest.com
31
Flour in bags examine seams of bags check
surface of bags, look under a few bags, look for
holes in bags, check pallet
http//www.fsa.usda.gov/daco/pdd/eob/bhous35.jpg
32
Inspection of incoming materials
  • Look for trails in dust to determine presence of
    insects
  • Boxes of grain products
  • check surface of transportation vehicle and dust
    residues,
  • remove inner pack,
  • check box and bottom of box,
  • check pallets

33
  • Inspect material before putting inside kitchen
    pantry
  • Check cereal boxes, flour bags, or any grain
    containing food

/www.artisanspecialties.com
34
General Principles for an IPM Program
  • Inspect incoming material
  • First in, first out

35
First In, First Out
www.olsensgrain.com
36
Pet Stores
Bags of pet food are common sources of
infestation.
37
Pet Stores
Pigs ear chew toy--dermestids www.dog-gonegoodies
.com
38
Grocery Stores
  • SPP can start infestation in food products, but
    become a problem in paper goods (packaging) where
    they can pupate.

39
General Principles for an IPM Program
  • Inspect incoming material
  • First in, first out
  • Sanitation

40
Sanitation
  • Spilled food
  • Flour dust
  • Trash containers
  • Broken packaging
  • Equipment cleaning

41
Sanitation
  • Its one thing to clean out a kitchen pantry
  • Discard infested items
  • Vacuum
  • Wipe shelves down with warm soapy water

pages.ivillage.com
42
Sanitation?
43
Sanitation?
http//www.worldgrain.com/graphic/bulk.gif
www.bulkwest.com
44
Non-chemical controls
  • Cold
  • Heat
  • Packaging
  • Mechanical destruction

45
Cold
  • Low temperature of product can retard or kill
    stored product pests
  • Grain storage silos usually have aeration
    equipment to pull cold air into grain in winter
    to kill or slow development of grain pests
  • Storing susceptible materials in refrigerator
    will slow or kill pests
  • Packages placed in refrigerator will kill most
    stored products pests if the cold penetrates to
    all areas of the package (4 days for a 5 lb bag
    of flour)

46
Heat
  • Processing plants are often heated to 120-150oF
    for 24 hours
  • Infested food can be placed in oven at 150oF for
    20 minutes
  • Infrared and microwaves are often used to kill
    pests in processing

47
Packaging
  • Packaging can keep products free of insects
  • Newly hatched larvae can penetrate cracks 0.12 mm
    wide
  • Waxed paper and cardboard can be penetrated by
    stored products pests
  • 75 of infestation occurs at folds and corners of
    a carton
  • Foil laminates can prevent most insect
    infestation
  • Glass jars and metal drums are virtually insect
    proof

48
Mechanical destruction
  • High rpm (2,900 rpm) will kill insects and mites
  • Milling and other processing equipment can
    mechanically destroy insect pests

49
Entoleter Impact milling equipment
http//www.entoleter.com/
50
Chemical control
  • Much changed with loss of MeBr
  • Contact treatments -- Ultralow volume (ULV) or
    Ultralow dosage (ULD) applications of pyrethrins
    or pyrethroids
  • Fogs, mists, and aerosols cannot penetrate food
    to kill insects
  • They kill exposed stages and can be used
    regularly to prevent infestations in the facility
    from attacking products
  • Protectant insecticides
  • Placed in cracks and crevices where insects rest.

51
Protectants
  • Inorganic dusts (diatomaceous earth) sometimes
    used to protect seeds and grains from insects
  • Malathion--
  • has been registered for application to all major
    grains and has been used since 1958.
  • EPA tolerance is 8 ppm
  • in recent years most of the common pest species
    have developed resistance to malathion
  • Not widely used

52
Protectants
  • Chlorpyrifos-methyl (Reldan),
  • Banned in 2003
  • Pirimiphos-methyl (Actellic)-- expanded
    registrations for stored grain insects
  • Not widely used
  • Spinosad
  • Registered for stored grain use in Jan. 2005.
  • Effective against all major insect pests.
  • Like Bt, it is a bacterial by-product so is
    considered natural and can thus be used on
    grain for any target market (including organic).

53
Protectants
  • Hydroprene (Gentrol)-- can be fogged and sprayed
    for control of stored products pests
  • Gentrol Point Source
  • Methoprene (Diacon II, Wellmark and DeGesch)
  • Bacillus thuringiensis (Dipel)-- exempt from
    tolerance regulations. Can be applied as a
    surface treatment for control of lepidopteran
    pests

54
Fumigants
  • Used to kill insects in raw and packaged food
  • Leave very little residue

55
ProFume is replacing Methyl Bromide
  • 2005 MeBr production/importation banned
  • ProFume major player now.
  • Dow AgroSciences
  • Sulfuryl Fluoride old product, used for
    structural pest control for many years (Vikane)
  • Disrupts the glycolosis and citric acid cycles,
    works in 24-48 h
  • Cost similar to MeBr

56
Phostoxin, Gastoxin, or Magtoxin
  • Can be used to kill insects in all kinds of
    grain, including seeds because phosphine has no
    effect on germination
  • At 68oF, fumigation time is 3 days, at 40-53oF
    recommended time of fumigation is 10 days
    therefore treated areas must be very gastight

57
Fumigation procedure for stored products pests
  • Sealing
  • similar to structural fumigation, but usually the
    infested product is placed on a concrete slab and
    covered with a tarp held in place with sand
    snakes or tape
  • Plastic tarp and tape is minimum required
  • Placards must be placed before start of
    fumigation and must contain name of fumigant,
    date of release, name and phone of applicator
  • If area around the fumigation is occupied,
    monitoring within 10 ft of the fumigated area is
    required and levels recorded

58
Fumigation procedure for stored products pests
  • Release of the fumigant
  • 2 person teams responsible for release of
    fumigant.
  • Full face respirators with proper canisters or
    SCBA equipment must be available before release
    of fumigant

59
Fumigation procedure for stored products pests
  • Aeration
  • A method of ventilation of the fumigated area
    must have been established before release of
    fumigant
  • SCBA must be used in concentrations above 15 ppm
  • full face respirators with yellow cannister with
    olive stripe are used for 0.3-15 ppm
  • no protection is required below 0.3 ppm
  • Anyone entering a fumigated area where
    concentrations are unknown must where SCBA

60
Fumigation procedure for stored products pests
  • Monitoring
  • Usually Draeger tubes and a hand pump are used to
    monitor levels of fumigant.
  • One pump will draw a specific amount of air
    through the tube
  • Color change in the reactive material in the tube
    indicates air levels

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