Thank you very much Patrick!

Mariève Perron

Technicienne en conservation/Conservation Technician

Musée Canadien de la nature/Canadian Museum of nature

819-923-8818



________________________________
De : 'patrick.dejong' via MuseumPests <[email protected]>
Envoyé : jeudi 13 novembre 2025 14:06
À : MuseumPests <[email protected]>
Objet : [EXT][PestList] Re: Surinam cockroaches

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Hi Mariève,

I have experience in managing pest roaches, like German, American and also 
Surinam cockroaces. Surinam cockroaches are less common pest roaches in the 
Netherlands due to their diet and more importantly dependence on climate but 
can be a problem and reproduce quickly. In this case, I’d say that control is 
the most achievable strategy. This can be done using traps with attractants — 
I’ve had very good experiences with the HoyHoy Trap A Roach, also for managing 
Surinam cockroaches, in botanical gardens with butterflies. I replaced the 
traps weekly, since they where full every 7 days. To prevent visitors and 
others from accessing them, I used to hide the traps under half plastic drain 
pipes.
Make sure to number the traps and mark their locations on a floor plan to 
ensure all traps are checked during inspections. It’s also a good idea to 
record the results in a pest control portal to track trends over time.
Good luck, and if you decide to try this method, I’d be curious to hear about 
your results.

With regards Patrick

Op donderdag 13 november 2025 om 18:36:14 UTC+1 schreef Mariève Perron:
Hello everyone,
I am reaching out for your expertise regarding an IPM challenge we are 
experiencing in our solarium, which currently hosts a live butterfly exhibition.
We have had an introduction of Pycnoscelus surinamensis (Surinam cockroaches), 
which have established a stable population. Prior to the arrival of the 
butterflies, we were able to remove and replace a significant amount of soil; 
however, some permanent garden beds with large tropical plants could not be 
emptied. We also conducted a deep cleaning and temporarily reduced both 
humidity and temperature in an attempt to make the environment less suitable 
for the cockroaches.
Now that the solarium is once again maintained under warm, humid, tropical 
conditions and with abundant food resources the cockroach population is 
increasing and thriving.
We are looking for safe, butterfly compatible strategies to help reduce 
cockroach numbers.  Once the exhibition ends, we will be able to remove all 
substrate and conduct a complete sanitation of the space.
For context, these cockroaches do not pose a threat to our museum collections, 
but they are undesirable within the exhibition environment.
Any advice, experience or recommendations would be greatly appreciated.
Thank you,


Mariève Perron

Technicienne en conservation/Conservation Technician

Musée Canadien de la Nature/Canadian Museum of nature

819-923-8818<tel:(819)%20923-8818>



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