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-----------------------------------------------------------I had the same issue 
at the Denver Art Museum.  The problem turned out to be a dead bird in the 
wall.  This was an entirely new space and the bird was left there by 
construction workers.  
The way we discovered it was through monitoring with clothes moth traps and 
tracking the number of new insects trapped or located per day.  After tracking 
the problem to one particular wall, we decided to drill a hole and used a 
plumber with a scoping camera to find the cause.  The day after the bird was 
removed, our counts dropped to zero.
They are feeding on something and if you can find that source, you can solve 
your problem.  But you are correct, "bug bombing" wouldn't do much of anything 
to the larvae and eggs and your problem will continue anyway.
Have you located any larvae, or are you just seeing adults?
Best of luck!
Christina M. Cain
Anthropology Collections Manager
CU Museum of Natural History
UCB 218, Boulder, CO 80309
303-492-2198


---- Original message ----
>Date: Fri, 20 Mar 2009 15:50:04 -0500
>From: "Crumpton, Trey" <[email protected]>  
>Subject: RE: Case-making Clothes Moth Problem  
>To: <[email protected]>
>
>   I don't think it would, because we're dealing with
>   huge spaces and many nooks and crannies.  I think
>   everything small enough to locally heat-treat, we
>   have frozen.  But keep the suggestions coming.
>
>    
>
>   Trey
>
>    
>
>   From: [email protected]
>   [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
>   Scott Harvey
>   Sent: Friday, March 20, 2009 3:43 PM
>   To: [email protected]
>   Subject: RE: Case-making Clothes Moth Problem
>
>    
>
>   Would a heat treatment be useful in this area. I use
>   this for bed bugs.
>
>    
>
>   Scott Harvey
>
>   Pest Specialist
>
>   University of Colorado, Boulder
>
>   303-735-0406
>
>    
>
>    
>
>   ----------------------------------------------------
>
>   From: [email protected]
>   [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
>   Crumpton, Trey
>   Sent: Friday, March 20, 2009 2:31 PM
>   To: [email protected]
>   Subject: Case-making Clothes Moth Problem
>
>   I am writing to ask if anyone knows of some possible
>   methods of control for a Case-Making Clothes Moth
>   infestation throughout a permanent exhibit space. 
>   We have been battling a moderate infestation for
>   many months now, but cannot find a way to completely
>   eradicate the bugs.  Short of "bug-bombing" the
>   whole building (which we don't want to do for a
>   variety of reasons, and which may not even solve the
>   problem), we are not sure what the best methods
>   are.  We have tried freezing animal mounts, CO2
>   chamber, and spraying around non-catalogued objects,
>   but if anyone has an idea or variation of those
>   methods, please let me know.
>
>    
>
>   Thanks for your time,
>
>    
>
>   Trey Crumpton
>
>   Collections Assistant
>
>   Mayborn Museum Complex
>
>   Baylor University
>
>   One Bear Place #97154
>
>   Waco, Texas  76798-7154
>
>   (254) 710-1190
>
>   Fax:  (254) 710-1173
>
>   www.maybornmuseum.com
>
>    
>
>    
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