Carpophilus is a genus of sap beetles. Several species are agricultural pests, typically causing feeding damage to a variety of fruits, grains and other food products worldwide.[1] [2] The genus contains a great number of species.[3]
Adult Carpophilus are oblong-shaped beetles roughly 3 mm in length and black, brown or mottled yellow in colour. The elytra are short, exposing the last two abdominal tergites. The antennae are clubbed.
Larval Carpophilus are yellowish with a brown head and a pair of urogomphi (giving the appearance of a forked tail). They are about 5 mm long when fully grown.
Adult Carpophilus are active in spring and summer. They can fly several kilometres in search of host fruit.
When this is discovered, the females lay eggs in fruit on the tree (in the case of stone fruit) or in fallen fruit on the ground (in the case of citrus, apples and figs). They may also lay in stored products such as dried fruit.
Larvae feed and grow within the fruit. When mature, larvae leave the fruit to pupate in the ground. Larvae that infest stored products also pupate in them.
There are several generations a year. Development from egg to adult takes approximately one month in summer. It is temperature-dependent, taking about 12 days at warm temperatures (32.2 °C) and up to 42 days at cooler temperatures (18.3 °C). Humidity also affects the life cycle, with faster development (and also more eggs laid) at higher humidity. Carpophilus can overwinter in the mature larva, pupa or adult stages, and does so in fruit, stored products, soil or in cracks or under bark of trees.
Several species of Carpophilus are pests of various fruits (including stone fruit, citrus, persimmons, apples and figs) and stored products (including corn, cornmeal, bread, wheat, oats, rice, sugar, beans, peanuts, nuts, cottonseed, copra, spices, drugs, and honey). They damage fruit directly with their feeding and also indirectly by spreading diseases (e.g. brown rot). One species, Carpophilus truncatus, has been especially fast-spreading and damaging numerous crops on several continents.[4] [5]