Search Results for: Animal hair not carded or combed
feed. the tiny white larvae eat holes through susceptible materials and damaged fabrics sometimes have silken cases or threads on their surface. clothes moth larvae preferentially feed on natural products such as cotton, silk, wool, feathers, fur, hair, leather and upholstered furniture. larvae will
also feed on lint, dust and paper products. they can feed on mixtures of natural and synthetic fibres, but cannot feed on materials made only from synthetic fibres. in nature, clothes moths infest pollen, hair, dead insects and dried animal remains. webbing clothes moth, tineola bisselliella common...
https://www.agric.wa.gov.au/pest-insects/identifying-and-controlling-clothes-moths-carpet-beetles-and-silver%EF%AC%81sh
; frogs'legs, fresh, chilled or frozen edible products of animal origin n.e.c. raw animal materials used in textile shorn wool, greasy, including fleece-washed shorn wool pulled wool, greasy, including fleece-washed pulled wool fine or coarse animal hair (including ,. horsehair), not carded or combed
for spinning raw silk (not thrown) silk waste, carded or combed wool, degreased or carbonised, not ,. , ,. carded or combed noils of wool or of fine animal hair wool and fine or coarse animal hair, carded or combed cotton, carded or combed jute and other textile bast fibres - ------- ------- -------...
https://dgft.gov.in/sites/default/files/cpc_0.pdf