Viewpoint: Clothes moths—these destructive, difficult-to-eradicate and dull-looking pests are worthy of admiration

The founding population came from within my house—pests that fervently fed on my sweaters, rugs and horsehair plaster. When they emerge from my walls in the evenings, I chase them with zeal and catch them in jam jars. "Moth!" I shout, jumping up from the couch, knocking over whatever is in front of me. In the lab, I feed them clippings of a mohair sweater that shrank in the wash, which I soak in brewer's yeast.

I'm a doctoral candidate studying the evolutionary relationships within the moth family Tineidae. I'm interested in how webbing clothes moths, Tineola bisselliella, have dispersed so widely and colonized our homes so readily. I am using a approach, examining the DNA of isolated populations of moths from all over the world. They eat crazy stuff. They live mostly indoors. How did this happen?

Resourceful, vigorous, tanklike eating machines

Webbing clothes moths are part of a distinctive, primordial lineage called the fungus moth family. These guys emerged long before more well-known species like silk moths. If you're unlucky, you are already aware of the destruction they can wreak on sweaters, rugs and upholstery. But you many not realize how fascinating Tineidae are.

These moths can eat hair, skin and feathers, all of which comprise a protein called keratin. Keratin—the main ingredient in nails, hoofs and horns—is notoriously tough to digest. Biologists still aren't sure how clothes moths can metabolize keratin, and this is something I aim to address in my research. One study posits that they harbor a microorganism in their gut that uses digestive enzymes to break down keratin for them.

Tineola bisselliella can survive on as little as a hairball and some vitamin B. Credit: Olaf Leillinger/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA

Tineola bisselliella larvae living it up on a scrap of sweater in the lab. Credit: Isabel Novick, CC BY-ND

This trap came back with plenty of moths that unwittingly donated themselves to science. Credit: Isabel Novick, CC BY-ND

Tineola bisselliella moth, ready for its close-up through the microscope. Credit: Isabel Novick, CC BY-ND