These critters inevitably get mixed into our food, but we shouldn’t be bothered by this. According to the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) regulations, it’s perfectly safe to have some insect parts mixed in while food processors are manufacturing our daily sources of nourishment.
But there are instances when we just don't want insects in our food, especially if those insects caused intensive damage to our food in storage. These insects are known as storage pests and can deliver substantial damage to stored food such as flour, grains, and maize.
So, here 5 insects you definitely want to keep out of your storage space:
1. Flour weevils are small insects belonging to the beetle family. Weevils generally infest rice, grains, nuts, beans, cereals, seeds, corn, and, yes, flour as well as other items. These insects live and feed inside the grains, causing extensive damage. A female flour weevil can lay up to 400 eggs within her lifetime. If left uncontrolled, dealing with flour weevil infestation can take a significant amount of time and resources.
Read more: How to Prevent Rice Weevils in Commodities
2. Grain borers are beetles found across the globe. These insects are able to eat cellulose products. Greater and lesser grain borers can do much damage to stored grains as well. These little bugs are strong flyers so they can easily spread and infest warehouses. Grain borers can also get into packages and be transported along with the commodities from one point to another. Grain borers prefer wheat, millet, maize, and rice. Female grain borers can lay up to 500 eggs within their lifetime. Upon hatching, grain borer larvae will immediately begin to feed on available resources. Both larvae and adults can produce large amounts of waste, which contaminates the commodities and compromises safety.
Read more: Preventing Lesser Grain Borers in Stored Grains
3. The cowpea pod borer is a type of moth, known for being a prominent pest of various crops and beans, including cowpeas, throughout the African region. Cowpea pod borers are known to severely damage crops by up to 70% to 80% in times of heavy infestations. Cowpea plants are considered to be one of the most important food sources in the savannas of Africa. This is why cowpea pod borers, also known as legume pod borers, are considered a major storage pest that should be eliminated.
4. The Indian meal moth, also known as the weevil moth, pantry moth, flour moth or the grain moth, is another insect that grain handlers and processors should be wary of. However, it's actually the larvae that damage the stored commodities, because interestingly, the adult Indian meal moth does not eat at all as an adult insect. Unlike other larvae, Indian meal moth larvae can eat through soft plastic and cardboard making stored grains, which they feed on, more vulnerable. This particular pantry moth is found all over the world and is a strong flyer as well. These pests can also be brought with packed commodities that have already been infested
5. Saw-toothed grain beetles also inflict damage on stored grains. These hardy insects are common around the world and can live up to 4 years. That said, these beetles are common storage pests that also feed on products like flour, cereals, nuts, and dried fruits. These beetles have flattened bodies and can enter through small crevices. They are also able to penetrate poorly packaged materials. Females directly lay their eggs on the stored commodities, so both larvae and adults feed on the grains.
These insects, as well as other kinds, contribute to the damage that causes the loss of up to 1/3 of all produced food yearly. Farmers and food processors try to control insect infestations by using pesticides and fumigants in storage areas but find several challenges.
One challenge is the increasing pesticide resistance of these storage pests. Simply put, the said resistance of insects develops when insects pass on genetic characteristics that allow their offspring to become immune to a certain pesticide. This commonly occurs because of the prolonged use of one specific pesticide that the insects eventually get used to.
Using pesticides in stored commodities has another drawback. Usually, these chemicals only kill off adult and larval insects but leave eggs to hatch and develop into new adults. This renders treating the stored food with fumigants and pesticides useless because infestations will simply occur again.
Another challenge that food producers and manufacturers face is the hastened spread of storage pests due to increasing global temperatures. It's been observed that warmer temperatures can cause increased insect activity and can even allow these bugs to thrive in previously inhospitable areas.
Alternative solutions are currently being used to control insect infestations. One such solution is the use of hermetic storage, wherein a modified atmosphere is created to deprive oxygen needed by the insects. This is done by sealing off a storage container and ensuring a carbon dioxide-rich environment inside.
By using carbon dioxide, killing off storage pests is an easier and safer task. Because this is a natural gas, applying carbon dioxide inside hermetic storage is also considered an organic pest control treatment.
GrainPro's solutions follow this simple concept to ensure the safety of stored agricultural commodities. The hermetically sealed storage that GrainPro has developed provides sure and safe protection that can also preserve commodities' quality. Insects are eliminated and damage due to infestations can be prevented. This, in turn, guarantees that food loss will be avoided.