I know there are different types of moths and one would expect that they eat different foods - but these traps do work on both the moths we had that eat flour (Pantry type) and protein (wool type) - at least for us. We got moths a few years ago from a box of dog biscuits. Moths flying around the kitchen....and larvae crawling on the kitchen ceiling at night - I went nuts! It took me a while to figure it out the source - I had put everything made with grain or flour into plastic zip lock bags and then one day saw the moths coming out from the dog biscuit box! Gotcha! The moths meanwhile had migrated to the living room and were eating feathers and wool. They may be different from "wool moths" but they were eating protein in feather and wool form - no question about it. I also saw them in a tin of llama - had left the lid ajar by mistake and they loved that - they were the same moths that came in with the dog biscuits - I compared the bodies. There certainly may be other kinds of "wool" moths that wouldn't be attracted to the traps - I don't know - but the ones that were in our house eating feathers and llama and dog biscuits were all trapped and the infestation ended because of the traps. That's all I did - and it worked! I still keep one trap in each room as a safety net and get an occasional spider or flying bug in it - but haven't had any more moths for years now. (Knock on wool). Julie
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