Search Results for: Dried poppy straw
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
larvae are small white grubs and are rarely seen. case-making clothes moth larvae spin a silken tube or 'case' for protection and they drag this along as they feed. they are often noticed when attached to walls or draging themselves across smooth floor surfaces. the adults are small ( cm), buff or straw-coloured...
https://www.agric.wa.gov.au/pest-insects/identifying-and-controlling-clothes-moths-carpet-beetles-and-silver%EF%AC%81sh