Also look at 

Pinniger, D. B., 2001. New pests for old: the changing status of museum pests 
in the UK. In: Kingsley, H. et al (Ed) Integrated Pest Management for 
collections. Proceedings of  2001 - a pest odyssey, James and James, London, 
2001. 9-13.

We now have a few more records of Reesa in the UK.
David
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Betsy Bruemmer 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Thursday, August 07, 2008 4:57 PM
  Subject: RE: [pestlist] Pheromone traps


  Perhaps I should clarify that the food bait that Alain has suggested is a 
larval monitor. And thank you all for your responses. This is a great resource.

   

  I received a reply from Julian Carter of the National Museum in Wales. He had 
difficulty posting to the list so I will share his response below, in case 
anyone is interested.

   

  The key problem with dealing with Reesa vespulae is that it is 
parthenogenetic, and thus you only need one to get an infestation. We have a 
low level infestation in the entomological collection areas but this has been 
kept in check by good collection management, housekeeping, blunder traps in key 
places and routine freezing. We hope continued good management will remove the 
beetle in the long-term. A good reference is Adams, R. G. 1978. The first 
British infestation of Reesa vespulae (Milliron)(Coleoptera: Dermestidae). 
Entomologists Gazette 29: 73 - 75.

   

  Jules

  Julian Carter 
  Conservation Officer 
  National Museum Wales 
  Cathays Park 
  Cardiff 
  UK 
  CF10 3NP 
  +4402920573230 
  www.museumwales.ac.uk 

   

   

  Betsy Bruemmer

  Collections Manager

  Museum of History & Industry (MOHAI)

  2700 24th Avenue East

  Seattle, WA   98112

  (P) 206-324-1126 x22

  (F) 206-324-1346

  www.seattlehistory.org

   

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