Getting Moth Control Right in Farmington Starts With Knowing Which Species You Have
Two distinct pest moth species account for the majority of Farmington residential infestations: the webbing clothes moth and the Indian meal moth. They eat different things, live in different areas, and are controlled by different methods. Applying the wrong approach — treating a pantry moth problem with wardrobe-targeted products, for instance — produces no result and allows the infestation to continue undisturbed.
The clothes moth's preference for undisturbed dark storage is what makes infestations develop undetected for so long in Farmington properties. Larvae feed steadily on natural fibres — wool, cashmere, silk, leather — for months or longer before wardrobe damage is noticed. By the time holes appear in clothing, the infestation has often spread beyond the immediate wardrobe to carpet edges, upholstery, and stored items in adjacent areas.
Why Treating the Moths You See Will Not Solve the Problem
The moths visible in your Farmington home are not responsible for any damage — adult moths have no functional mouthparts and do not feed. They exist solely to reproduce. Every hole in a garment, every contaminated pantry item, every piece of webbing in a wardrobe corner was produced by a larva. Seeing adults is a reliable signal that larvae are already active in the property — treatment must reach them where they are, not chase the adults.
How Pantry Moth Infestations Start and Spread in Farmington
The Indian meal moth enters Farmington homes in infested shop-bought goods — flour, oats, cereals, nuts, dried fruit, spices, and pet food are all common sources. A single infested bag is enough to establish a pantry infestation. Larvae crawl between containers via webbing threads, pupate in pantry ceiling corners or wall junctions, and adults then lay eggs back across the pantry. Once established, the infestation spreads faster than most homeowners expect.