enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Woodworm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woodworm

    Wood affected by woodworm. Signs of woodworm usually consist of holes in the wooden item, with live infestations showing powder (faeces), known as frass, around the holes.. The size of the holes varies, but they are typically 1 to 1.5 millimetres (5 ⁄ 128 to 1 ⁄ 16 in) in diameter for the most common household species, although they can be much larger in the case of the house longhorn beet

  3. Woodboring beetle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woodboring_beetle

    Fragment of a broomstick affected by woodworm. Woodboring beetles are commonly detected a few years after new construction. The lumber supply may have contained wood infected with beetle eggs or larvae, and since beetle life cycles can be one or more years, several years may pass before the presence of beetles becomes noticeable.

  4. Powderpost beetle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Powderpost_beetle

    Powderpost Beetle Fact Sheet from the National Pest Management Association with information on habits, habitat and prevention; Museum pests including powderpoke Archived 2004-12-11 at the Wayback Machine at the National Park Service. Powderpost beetles – The other, other wood destroying insects from Michigan State University Extension.

  5. Great spotted woodpecker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_spotted_woodpecker

    This woodpecker occurs in all types of woodlands and eats a variety of foods, being capable of extracting seeds from pine cones, insect larvae from inside trees or eggs and chicks of other birds from their nests. It breeds in holes excavated in living or dead trees, unlined apart from wood chips. The typical clutch is four to six glossy white ...

  6. Urocerus gigas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urocerus_gigas

    Urocerus gigas is a wood-boring insect that attacks softwoods of freshly felled logs/unhealthy trees. The species lives in discrete tunnels, frequently filled with hard-packed coarse fibrous frass, hard to dig out from tunnels.

  7. Royal Entomological Society Handbooks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Entomological...

    Handbooks for the Identification of British Insects is a series of books produced by the Royal Entomological Society (RES). The aim of the Handbooks is to provide illustrated identification keys to the insects of Britain, together with concise morphological, biological and distributional information.

  8. Lyctus carbonarius - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lyctus_carbonarius

    Lyctus carbonarius is a wood-boring beetle in the family Bostrichidae (formerly in the family Lyctidae, which is now a subfamily of Bostrichidae), commonly known as the southern lyctus beetle. It is a serious pest of hardwoods including ash, hickory, oak, maple and mahogany and can infest many products in the home including hardwood flooring ...

  9. Common furniture beetle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_furniture_beetle

    The female lays her eggs in cracks in wood or inside old exit holes, if available. The eggs hatch after some three weeks, each producing a 1 millimetre (0.039 in) long, creamy white, C-shaped larva. For three to four years the larvae bore semi-randomly through timber, following and eating the starchy part of the wood grain, and grow up to 7 ...