tobacco, Ephestia elutella, called the tobacco moth. He states that ‘in 
a review of the literature of this insect he finds that it "has been 
recorded by the following common names: chocolate moth, walnut moth, 
currant moth, and cacao moth. Since Chittenden in 1897 recorded the 
insect as the 'chocolate moth' and since perhaps it inflicts greater 
damage to chocolate and cacao than to any other commodity, we should like 
to propose that the American Association of Economic Entomologists ap- 
prove chocolate moth as the common name of this insect." 
