In commercial settings, firebrats are primarily a concern for bakeries, commercial kitchens, laundries with hot boiler rooms, large industrial facilities with steam heating infrastructure, and older institutional buildings with aging boiler systems.
Bakeries and pizzerias — which maintain extreme ambient temperatures for extended periods — are the most commonly affected commercial premises. A firebrat population in a commercial bakery is not merely a nuisance; it represents a food safety and regulatory compliance issue, as the insects feed on flour, grain dust, and starchy debris in the warmest zones of the production environment.
Their heat tolerance makes some standard insecticide formulations less effective in extreme-temperature zones, requiring targeted professional treatment approaches.
Habitat
Commercial firebrat habitats are defined by heat: commercial bread and pizza ovens, industrial dryers, boiler rooms, steam heating infrastructure in older buildings, commercial laundries, and the hot zones of food manufacturing facilities.
In bakeries, firebrats are found in the warm spaces around proofing ovens, underneath deck ovens where residual heat accumulates, and in the wall voids immediately adjacent to the baking chamber.
Unlike silverfish, firebrats do not require high humidity — they can tolerate quite dry conditions as long as temperatures are sufficiently high.
Active Areas
Windsor
Restricted to specific microhabitats; reports from older commercial kitchens, bakeries, and buildings with older boiler systems.
Tecumseh
Occasional reports from residential properties with older heating systems; no significant commercial concentration.
LaSalle
Low prevalence consistent with the broader region; modern residential construction limits suitable residential habitat.
Amherstburg
Low prevalence; older institutional buildings and properties with legacy boiler heating present the greatest local risk.
Lakeshore
Low prevalence; consistent with regional pattern for this highly habitat-specific species.
Essex
Low prevalence; agricultural processing facilities with heat-generating equipment may present localised risk.
Kingsville
Low prevalence; greenhouse operations with boiler heating systems may present a slightly elevated risk environment.
Leamington
Low prevalence in residential settings; food processing facilities with sustained high-temperature production environments represent the primary local commercial risk.
Chatham-Kent
Low prevalence. Cases in commercial bakeries, boiler rooms, and heat-intensive industrial operations.
St. Thomas
Low prevalence. Occasional cases in commercial properties with high heat environments.
Seasonality
In commercial premises operating 24 hours (bakeries, hospital kitchens), firebrats have essentially no seasonal restriction and can maintain year-round populations at maximum reproductive rate.
In facilities with seasonal or reduced operation in summer, some reduction in reproductive rate may be observed, but the species’ heat tolerance means that summer ambient temperatures in commercial kitchens are rarely a limiting factor.
Spring
Summer
Autumn
Winter
Appearance
For commercial pest control technicians, the mottled colouration and consistent association with extreme heat sources are the diagnostic combination.
A silverfish-like insect discovered in the vicinity of a commercial oven, furnace, or steam boiler should be presumed to be a firebrat until confirmed otherwise.
Conversely, silverfish-like insects found in cool, damp basement areas, bathrooms, or archive rooms are almost certainly silverfish. Location is as important as appearance in correct field identification of these two closely related species.
- Mottled grey-brown and tan scales giving an irregular, speckled appearance — distinctly different from the uniform silver sheen of the common silverfish
- Same carrot-shaped body form as silverfish with three long tail bristles (two cerci and one median filament) and very long antennae
- Requires temperatures above 37°C to thrive and reproduce efficiently — found almost exclusively in extreme heat microhabitats
- Typical locations include areas directly adjacent to ovens, boilers, furnaces, commercial bread ovens, pizza ovens, and steam heating pipes
- In commercial contexts, bakeries, commercial kitchens, and older buildings with steam heating are the highest-risk environments
- More heat-tolerant than any other common Canadian household insect — can survive brief exposure to temperatures that would kill most other arthropods
Behaviour
In commercial kitchens and bakeries, firebrats are most active during the coolest hours — late night and early morning — when kitchen equipment is off or idling and the environment is accessible.
During peak production hours when equipment is at maximum temperature, firebrats remain in concealed harborage.
Their feeding on flour dust, bread crumbs, and starchy residues in production equipment crevices makes them a direct food contamination risk in food production environments. A thorough deep-clean programme targeting the harborage zones around all heat-generating equipment is an essential component of firebrat management in commercial kitchens.
Lifecycle
Firebrats reproduce most efficiently at temperatures above 37°C and their development rate is highly temperature-dependent. At optimal temperatures (37–43°C), the egg stage lasts only 12–14 days. Nymphs pass through multiple moults, with development to adulthood taking several months under optimal conditions. Reproduction effectively ceases below approximately 30°C and the species cannot establish populations in normal room-temperature environments. Adults continue to moult throughout their lives as with all members of the order Zygentoma. Adult lifespan is up to 2 years under optimal thermal conditions. Multiple overlapping generations are possible in continuously heated environments.
Egg
In commercial bakery and kitchen environments, eggs are deposited in the warmest available harborage sites — inside equipment crevices, behind oven panels, in gaps around heat-generating machinery.
The short incubation period at bakery temperatures means populations can recruit new individuals rapidly, making early detection and intervention critical.
Nymph
In commercial kitchen and bakery inspections, the presence of nymphs at various sizes confirms an established, actively reproducing population.
In these environments, nymphs are most likely to be found during off-hours inspections when the kitchen is cool — under equipment, in floor cracks, and in the recesses of machinery adjacent to heat sources.
Adult
In commercial pest monitoring, glue-board traps placed near heat sources capture firebrat adults and nymphs.
Adults from commercial kitchens are sometimes larger and more robustly patterned than those from residential settings, likely reflecting better nutritional availability. Population monitoring data from traps placed near and away from heat sources helps define the infestation zone and assess treatment efficacy.
Signs You May Have a Problem
- Mottled grey-brown silverfish-like insects found in or around commercial ovens, boilers, proofing chambers, industrial dryers, or steam heating infrastructure
- Insects discovered during off-hours kitchen or bakery inspection near the base of deck ovens, under proofing equipment, or in equipment crevices adjacent to heat sources
- Frass and cast skins in flour accumulations, grain dust, or organic debris in the crevices of heat-zone equipment
- Glue-board traps placed near heat-generating equipment capturing mottled grey-brown insects of varying sizes
- Food contamination evidence — insect fragments, frass, or cast skins — discovered in grain residues or flour dust in the vicinity of bakery or kitchen heat equipment
- Multiple size classes (nymphs and adults) present simultaneously, confirming on-site reproduction rather than accidental introduction
Risks & Concerns
In food production environments, firebrats represent a direct food safety risk.
Their presence in a bakery, commercial kitchen, or food processing facility can result in product contamination with insect fragments, frass, and cast skins; failed food safety audits; and potential regulatory enforcement action. In any food business, the discovery of firebrats in production areas should be treated as a food safety non-conformance requiring immediate remediation.
The risk of reputational damage from a food safety incident related to pest contamination is significant for any food-producing business.
Prevention
- Establish and maintain a rigorous deep-cleaning programme for all heat-generating kitchen and bakery equipment, including detailed cleaning of crevices, under-oven spaces, and equipment interiors
- Seal all gaps around equipment feet, power conduits, and plumbing penetrations in kitchen and bakery floors and walls
- Deploy glue-board monitoring traps in all high-risk heat zones — near ovens, boilers, and furnaces — and record catches weekly
- Train kitchen and maintenance staff to report sightings of silverfish-like insects near heat sources, and differentiate firebrat (mottled, near heat) from silverfish (silver, in cool damp areas)
- Implement incoming goods inspection for flour and grain deliveries, as firebrat eggs may be present in severely infested bakery supply chains
DIY Control
- Enhanced deep cleaning of all heat-zone equipment is the most important immediate DIY-level intervention in commercial kitchens
- Increase monitoring trap density in affected heat zones and schedule daily inspections during treatment period
- Seal all accessible gaps around equipment in the affected zone
- Professional pest management is essential for any confirmed commercial kitchen or bakery infestation — the regulatory implications of insect contamination in a food production environment require professional documentation and treatment
Professional Control
- Professional commercial treatment for firebrats in food production environments must comply with all applicable food safety regulations regarding pesticide application in food contact zones
- Crack-and-crevice insecticide applications with formulations approved for use in food handling areas target the harborage sites within and around heat-generating equipment
- A comprehensive deep-clean in conjunction with treatment — performed after food production has ceased and before the next production cycle — maximises treatment efficacy
- A documented pest management programme with professional treatment records is essential for food safety audit compliance; ongoing monitoring should continue for a minimum of 3 months post-treatment to confirm eradication
Frequently Asked Questions
How do you treat firebrats in a commercial bakery or laundry?
Treatment in high-temperature commercial environments requires products and application methods suitable for hot areas.
Professional treatment with crack-and-crevice application of registered insecticide dust in inaccessible areas is most effective. Address any food or organic debris accumulation in hot zones as part of the sanitation programme. Ensure treatment is performed when equipment is cooled to a safe access temperature.
How do I tell firebrats from silverfish?
Location is the most reliable field identification indicator. Firebrats in commercial settings are most often found in bakeries, laundries, boiler rooms, and anywhere with sustained high ambient temperatures.
Professional identification is recommended if the setting is ambiguous.
Why are firebrats found near boilers and furnaces?
Bakeries, laundries, and any industrial facility with high ambient temperatures in processing or mechanical areas are the primary commercial firebrat environments. Treatment must target these high-temperature zones specifically.
Are firebrats harmful?
In commercial food environments, firebrat contamination of food products is a food safety issue. In other commercial settings, the damage risk is primarily to stored materials and documents.
What do firebrats eat?
In commercial bakeries and food processing facilities, firebrats can infest flour, grains, and starchy products stored near heat sources. This creates a food safety concern in addition to the property damage risk.