[Nhcoll-l] [pestlist] Dermestid help
bugman22
bugman22 at aol.com
Mon Nov 19 08:04:39 EST 2018
Tonya - Have you considered Vapona pest strips hung in the vaults at a rate of one strip/1,000 cu ft? After one month, you can remove them. Tom Parker -----Original Message-----
From: Tonya.Haff <Tonya.Haff at csiro.au>
To: nhcoll-l <nhcoll-l at mailman.yale.edu>; pestlist <pestlist at googlegroups.com>
Cc: Alex.Drew <Alex.Drew at csiro.au>; Christopher.Wilson <Christopher.Wilson at csiro.au>
Sent: Sun, Nov 18, 2018 11:12 pm
Subject: [pestlist] Dermestid help
<!-- #yiv1988423298 _filtered #yiv1988423298 {font-family:"Cambria Math";panose-1:2 4 5 3 5 4 6 3 2 4;} _filtered #yiv1988423298 {font-family:Calibri;panose-1:2 15 5 2 2 2 4 3 2 4;} #yiv1988423298 #yiv1988423298 p.yiv1988423298MsoNormal, #yiv1988423298 li.yiv1988423298MsoNormal, #yiv1988423298 div.yiv1988423298MsoNormal {margin:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;font-size:11.0pt;font-family:"Calibri", sans-serif;} #yiv1988423298 a:link, #yiv1988423298 span.yiv1988423298MsoHyperlink {color:#0563C1;text-decoration:underline;} #yiv1988423298 a:visited, #yiv1988423298 span.yiv1988423298MsoHyperlinkFollowed {color:#954F72;text-decoration:underline;} #yiv1988423298 span.yiv1988423298EmailStyle17 {font-family:"Calibri", sans-serif;color:windowtext;} #yiv1988423298 .yiv1988423298MsoChpDefault {font-family:"Calibri", sans-serif;} _filtered #yiv1988423298 {margin:72.0pt 72.0pt 72.0pt 72.0pt;} #yiv1988423298 div.yiv1988423298WordSection1 {} -->Hi all, We just discovered that we have a dermestid (variegated carpet beetle) infestation here. Very bad news, as we’ve been really successful at keeping our vaults clean until now. At any rate, I just found a few hundred adults on the floor of our bone vault – dead and dying. I’m sure they are eating some residual material on our dingo skulls, which were not cleaned properly before storing (this is an historical problem). In addition, we’ve found a few (~20) in our mammal (skin and skulls) vault, and a very few (~10) in our bird vault. I’m not sure what the cause of this outbreak is, other than nice warm weather. In the bird and mammal vaults they are concentrated near the door cracks to the emergency exists (yes this is probably a design flaw). My colleagues are hopeful they have just come in to investigate and have died, but my instinct tells me they may have been eating specimens and are now trying to leave. Ideally we want them gone completely from everywhere, though I know this is easier said than done. For the bone vault, we can freeze the contents of the room, clean/fumigate the room, and then put the material back in. But the mammal and bird collections are larger and more delicate and so this is not so easy, and perhaps not warranted, given the limited number of dermestids we’ve found there. I’m wondering if any of you could recommend solutions for how to tackle this problem? Would placing pheromone traps to localise the problem and then freezing/fumigating specific cabinets be sufficient, and how would we know if it’s not? Anyway, any thoughts or suggestions would be very welcome. Cheers, Tonya --------------------------------------------------------- Dr Tonya Haff Collections Manager Australian National Wildlife Collection National Research Collections Australia, CSIRO Canberra, Australia Phone: (+61) 02 62421566 --
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Museumpests" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to pestlist+unsubscribe at googlegroups.com.
To post to this group, send email to pestlist at googlegroups.com.
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/pestlist.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/pestlist/cac7915bb135421eb5858865e6ce2d80%40exch3-mel.nexus.csiro.au.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://mailman.yale.edu/pipermail/nhcoll-l/attachments/20181119/771e7edc/attachment.html>
More information about the Nhcoll-l
mailing list