Get Rid of and Prevent Flour Mites
Flour mites are tiny pests that infest dry goods such as cereals, pancake mix, dried vegetable materials, cheese, corn and dried fruits. They can thrive in the cleanest of kitchens if the conditions are right. A humid, dark, and warm pantry is the perfect breeding ground for flour mites, which usually get into your kitchen either already in the foodstuffs or hiding on the packaging. This article will teach you how to identify an infestation, how to treat it, and how to prevent future infestations.
Contents
Steps
Detecting Flour Mites
- Look for brown "mite dust" on the surface of your food. Flour mites have off-white bodies and are so small they are nearly invisible to the naked eye. Because of this, it is very difficult to detect mites until you have a full-blown infestation. The mites have brownish legs, and the collection of living and dead mites and their waste will appear as a brown coating or tinge. It may look a bit like sand.
- Rub the mite dust or some questionable flour between your fingers and check for a minty smell. When flour mites are crushed they give off a distinct minty odor. The food may also develop a sickly sweet smell or taste, even before you detect the mites.
- Spread some flour on a flat surface and inspect it after 15 minutes. Make the flour as smooth and level as you can before walking away. If the flour is infested with mites, the surface will be uneven due to the movement of the mites.
- Stick a piece of scotch tape on packages or on the pantry shelves and inspect for mites. The mites will stick to the tape and you may be able to see them with a magnifying glass. Also check the glue on box tops, the edges of sealed flour canisters. They might not be able to get inside, but they may be on the lip and get in once you open the container.
- Notice if you are inexplicably itchy after handling flour or other grains. Though flour mites don't bite, some people may have an allergic reaction to the allergens on the mites or their waste products. This is also known as "grocer's itch."
Getting Rid of Flour Mites
- Put severely infested foods in plastic garbage bags and put them in the trash bins outside your house. The flour mites feed on the germ in flour as well as mold, and their presence could indicate the food has gone bad. They can also pass the mold spores to other foods if they travel to another container.
- In rare cases, people may have an allergic reaction to consuming flour contaminated by lice, called oral mite anaphylaxis, or pancake syndrome. A reaction usually occurs within minutes after eating the contaminated food and can cause hives, difficulty breathing, swelling of the throat, nausea, weakness, and/or collapse.
- Contact a doctor immediately if you experience any of these symptoms.
Don't worry if you think you may have consumed some of the mites--they are harmless to most people.
- Freeze any dried goods that may be infested to kill the flour mites. If you have foodstuffs that show no sign of infestation or are not completely overrun with mites, storing them at temperatures below 0°F (-18°C) for four to seven days will kill any stray mites, eggs, or larva.
- Once the mites are dead, try sifting the dry goods or removing portions you know were infested and may contain dead mites.
- Remove and sanitize any bins, jars, or containers where contaminated foodstuffs were stored. You want to remove every last speck of food from these containers, depriving any surviving mites of their food. Wash the containers and lids in very hot water and make sure they are completely dry before you refill them.
- Thoroughly clean the pantry or cabinet where the infested goods were stored. Vacuum the shelves and walls, paying special attention to crevices. If you don't have a vacuum, try using a clean, dry brush to sweep out the area.
- Wipe down all the surfaces, but avoid using chemical pesticides anywhere near your food or food storage.
- Try cleaning with a mixture of water and vinegar (1 part vinegar to 2 parts water) or natural insect repellents and safe pesticides like neem oil or orange oil (1 part oil to 10 parts water).
- Use a hairdryer to dry the storage area. Flour mites like damp, humid places.
Make sure you throw the vacuum bag in the trash bin outside immediately after cleaning.
Preventing Flour Mites
- Keep food storage areas dry and cool. Flour mites cannot thrive in a low-humidity environment (under 65%), and you should never see an infestation if your storage area is well-ventilated. Pay attention to the placement of kettles, cookers, dryers, and stoves and make sure they are not causing moist air to collect in food storage areas.
- Try keeping a fan in your pantry to cool the air and dry out any moisture.
- Store flour, grains, cereal, and other susceptible foods in clean, airtight containers.
- Resealable plastic bags can work short-term, but mites can chew holes through them and get to your food. Try glass or thick plastic containers instead.
- The lifecycle of flour mites is about one month, so if you can keep everything clean and sealed up tight, any remaining mites should die off.
- Try to avoid combining old and new foods in the containers. Wait until you've used up all the flour in the bin, give the bin a thorough cleaning and remove any old flour stuck to the bottom, and then refill with the new flour.
This will keep your food fresh and dry and keep mites out. If there are any mites that survived your cleaning process, depriving them of their food source will cause them to starve and prevent them from laying eggs in your grains.
- Buy dry goods in small portions. Though it may be a little more expensive than buying in large, bulk quantities, but if you buy smaller portions, you are less likely to have susceptible foodstuffs sitting around for long periods of time. If they sit in a humid environment for too long, they may become damp and start to mold and start another infestation of mites.
- Make sure you inspect all packaging before bringing dry goods home. Make sure they are not damp or damaged and that they were not stored on a damp shelf.
- Tape bay leaves in your containers or in the cupboard where you store food. Flour mites, cockroaches, moths, rats, weevils, and many other pests are said to hate the smell of bay leaves and will avoid your dry goods if they are present. You can put the leaves right into the container (the taste won't leech into your food) or tape them to the lid of the container or inside the pantry or cupboard.
- There are conflicting reports about whether to use dry or fresh bay leaves. People have reported success with both, so buy whatever is easiest for you and see how it works.
- Store pet food away from your other dry goods. The regulations for pet foods aren't as strict as ours, and they may be more likely to harbor pests. Store these in airtight containers away from your own foodstuffs.
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Sources and Citations
- ↑ http://ento.psu.edu/extension/factsheets/flour-and-grain-mites
- ↑ http://homeguides.sfgate.com/pantry-mites-83735.html
- ↑ http://www.the-piedpiper.co.uk/th7g.htm
- http://citybugs.tamu.edu/factsheets/biting-stinging/others/ent-3009/
- http://www.merckmanuals.com/professional/injuries-poisoning/bites-and-stings/mite-bites
- http://www.anaphylaxis.org.uk/what-is-anaphylaxis/signs-and-symptoms
- ↑ stoke.gov.uk/food
- http://www.discoverneem.com/neem-oil.html
- http://www.stoke.gov.uk/ccm/content/environment/environmental-health/food/food-complaints/mites-in-flour.en;jsessionid=a1s3A_3X-h28
- ↑ http://littlegreendot.com/reader-question-all-natural-remedy-for-flour-mites/
- http://www.flourmites.com/
- http://www.houstonpress.com/restaurants/banishing-bugs-with-bay-leaves-6411592