Anne,
 
We purchase our pheromone traps from Insects Limited
www.insectslimited.com <http://www.insectslimited.com/>   .  We have
always been very pleased with their products and service. If you are not
on distribution for their newsletter, Fumigants and Pheromones, you
should be. We used moth pheromones and traps to detect, pinpoint, and
control an infestation in our storage area over the past few years. That
being said, we have never caught many carpet beetles when we monitor,
even though we know we have had low level infestations in the past, so I
do question the effectiveness of that particular pheromone. It seems
that some insect specific pheromones are more effective than others. I
would appreciate feedback from others who have used the carpet beetle
specific pheromone (black or varied). 
 
My experience with carpet beetles is that they tend to eat what they
like best and do not seem to spread to every possible food source in the
storage area. When we have found them, they seem to be in one particular
artifact feasting away and once we isolate, vacuum, and freeze that
artifact, it seems to solve the problem. Of course they are capable of
flying and crawling to other artifacts and I am sure they do, depending
on how long they have infested an area and how large the population is
and if they have to look for more food. But our experience has been that
they have not spread very rapidly. Perhaps we are just on top of our IPM
program, but the few infestations we have found seem to have been around
for quite a while and were still relatively confined. 
 
One important point: we keep all of our textile storage areas very cold
in the winter with essentially no heat and they cool down to around 10
degrees F. Therefore, any infestation progresses very slowly. Some bugs
are undoubtedly there, but at a very low level. When we have experienced
outbreaks is when we have permanently moved artifacts such as carriages
from barns with no heat into a new "improved" storage area that is
heated to around 55 degrees all winter and humidified. Two years after
the move, the moths appeared in one of our vehicles. My theory is that
they have been there for many years at a low level, but the cold weather
has kept the active population very low. After a few years of not being
frozen every year, their population rose to a more active and detectable
level. Discussion on these observations are also encouraged.
 
Richard L. Kerschner
Director of Preservation and Conservation
Shelburne Museum
PO Box 10, Route 7
Shelburne, VT   05482
(802) 985-3348 x3361
[email protected]

________________________________

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Anne Lane
Sent: Thursday, January 14, 2010 8:34 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [pestlist] Varied Carpet Beetle



Help! I have just found a few adult varied carpet beetle larvae crawling
over a cluster of old loom reeds I was about to rehouse. I understand
there are pheromone traps for these guys. Does anyone have a vendor to
recommend - price, alas, IS an object - or any advice as to best
placement, how many, how best to detect where they might be coming from?
I suspect our historic house, which had some larvae brought in on bits
of raw wool used in our loom display. Are these critters likely to crawl
into boxes, or fly up under muslin dust covers to get at wool or silk? 

 

Many thanks, 

 

Anne

ANNE T LANE, COLLECTIONS MANAGER

THE CHARLOTTE MUSEUM OF HISTORY

WHERE HISTORY HAS A HOME

3500 Shamrock Drive

Charlotte NC 28215

tel 704-568-1774, ext 110

fax 704-566-1817

[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 

 

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