Adult insects emerge in late spring at the time apple trees are in flower, and are attracted towards the open flowers on warm sunny days. Eggs are laid in slits cut just below the
calyx, usually one egg per bloom. The eggs hatch about five days later, when 80% of the petals have fallen, and the newly hatched larvae make their way into the immature fruitlets, first burrowing under the skin and later tunnelling into the centre. As they grow larger, they tunnel outwards and move into an adjoining fruitlet, making a large entry hole which gets clogged with brown, sticky
frass. When their development is complete and they have tunneled into several fruitlets, the damaged apples fall to the ground. The larvae make papery cocoons underground in which to overwinter.
Pupation takes place in this cocoon in the spring but some individuals spend two winters underground. Controlled experiments in the late 1970s showed 17% – 26% of adults emerged a year after 250 larvae cocooned, while 1% – 9% emerged in the second year. Two solitary adults were recorded emerging the third year after cocooning. The pupae are susceptible to desiccation and a number of fungi, such as
Paecilomyces fumosoroseus. ==Damage==