Tom,
I agree with you having looked at the images.
What an amazing website!
David
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: [email protected] 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Wednesday, July 07, 2010 8:42 PM
  Subject: Re: [pestlist] WG: bugs in the museum...


  David -

  The beetle in question is commonly called the Ash Bark Beetle.  I think it's 
Leperisinus fraxini, instead of varius, simply because of the pattern on the 
elytra.

  Tom Parker





  -----Original Message-----
  From: David Pinniger <[email protected]>
  To: [email protected]
  Sent: Wed, Jul 7, 2010 12:56 pm
  Subject: Re: [pestlist] WG: bugs in the museum...


  Elisabeth,
  It could be a Scolytid beetle, they look like this and will emerge from wood 
with bark in huge numbers. 
  I do not have any pictures of any with such markings.
  You could ask Uwe Noldt in Germany, he is the best woodborer expert I know in 
Europe.
  David
    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: E. Abgottspon 
    To: [email protected] 
    Sent: Tuesday, July 06, 2010 4:35 PM
    Subject: RE: [pestlist] WG: bugs in the museum...


    Dear pestlist-Members

    Thank you very much for your fast answers from around the world!

    I was looking for pictures of the anobium punctatum and the Anthrenus 
verbasci in the Internet and I dont’ think the beetles are anobii. But, maybe 
I’ve got both of them and the anobii aren’t beetles yet……. There is a lot of 
„wooden powder“ on the wood…
    L
    I didnt’ want to sent pictures which are too heavy… but unfortunately then 
you see even less… 
    I send you one which is not reduced concering the size, but even then you 
can’t see it properly I guess. 

    The beetle itself is about 3 millimeters in length.

    I called an expert who is coming today – so I will soon know more about the 
specimen and the problems/risks, I hope…

    But I’m glad to have some help from museum-experts as well!

    Best regards and thank you again
    Elisabeth Abgottspon



----------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Von: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] 
Im Auftrag von James Hogan
    Gesendet: Dienstag, 6. Juli 2010 17:13
    An: [email protected]
    Betreff: RE: [pestlist] WG: bugs in the museum...

    Dear Elisabeth,
    I agree with Monika Åkerlund, it is essential to get a correct 
identification of the beetles. Only then will you know where they are coming 
from and what action, if any, is necessary. They do not look like Anthrenus or 
Anobium because they are the wrong shape and they have what appears to be a 
strong spherical antennal club. But more than that it is difficult to say 
because the photos are not very clear  (i know it is difficult to get good 
photos of small insects without specialist equipment).  Perhaps you could send 
specimens to your national museum to get them identified?
    Let us know how you get on,
    James Hogan

    James Hogan
    Hope Entomological Collections
    Oxford University Museum of Natural History
    Parks Road, OXFORD OX1 3PW, UK.  Tel: 01865 272 978

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

    From: [email protected] [[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Monika Åkerlund [[email protected]]
    Sent: 06 July 2010 15:39
    To: [email protected]
    Subject: FW: [pestlist] WG: bugs in the museum...

    Dear all,

    I have looked at a closer photo of one of the beetles. It is neither an 
Anthrenus nor an Anobium punctatum . 
    The beetles should be identified by an entomologist.

    Best wishes
    Monika Åkerlund



    Monika Åkerlund
    Curator
    Research Div./Preventive Conservation Group
    Swedish Museum of Natural History
    Box 50007
    SE-104 05 Stockholm
    Sweden
    Tel. +46 (0)8 519 542 01
    Fax.+46 (0)8 519 540 85
    E-mail. [email protected]
    www.nrm.se
    www.nrm.se/premal


----------------------------------------------------------------------------

    From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Julianne Phippard
    Sent: den 6 juli 2010 15:29
    To: [email protected]
    Subject: RE: [pestlist] WG: bugs in the museum...

    Elisabeth,

    From the photos of the beetles and damage, they look like furniture beetle 
to me (anobium punctatum).  The larvae will have been living in the wood, 
tunnelling undetected (sometimes for years) and the adults are only now 
emerging, perhaps triggered by the temperature change as the wood came into 
your museum or the arrival of summer weather.  However, if your gallery is 
fairly stable with a moderate relative humidity (under 50% RH) then they will 
probably not survive to lay eggs anywhere else, and in the UK we usually do not 
find infestations surviving in centrally heated buildings because the RH goes 
quite low over the winter.  However, if your building is humid most of the year 
or damp in some areas, you should be watching your pest traps very closely in 
the spring from now on.  You will not be able to tell if the larvae are living 
in the wood and will only know you have a problem when the adults emerge.

    These beetles are a wood boring species and I believe they are unlikely to 
attack historic natural history collections.  However, we recently had a 
problem with new taxidermy birds mounted on fresh wooden mounts (tree 
branches), where the beetles were living in the mounts and emerged when the 
specimens came into the museum.  Fortunately, we had quarantined these new 
acquisitions, so they did not infest any other collections.  Also, we usually 
freeze props and display materials that might pose a risk to our collections to 
prevent the introduction of pests into our galleries or stores.

    A fact sheet on this pest can be found here:

    
http://www.collectionslink.org.uk/index.cfm?ct=assets.assetDisplay/title/Pest%20Fact%20sheet%20No%202%20Furniture%20beetle%2FWoodworm/assetId/377

    There are fact sheets on other major museum pests on this website as well 
as other information you may find helpful.

    Best of luck,

    Julie Phippard
    Senior Preventive Conservator
    Conservation & Scientific Research
    The British Museum
    Great Russell Street
    London WC1B 3DG
    02073238278


    From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of E. Abgottspon
    Sent: 06 July 2010 09:40
    To: [email protected]
    Subject: [pestlist] WG: bugs in the museum...

    Dear members of the pestlist

    I’m the „curator“ of a little a Museum in Switzerland, but not knowing much 
about pests. It would be great if you can help me concerning a bug-problem.

    At the moment, we show an exhibition about different „phenomenas“ in the 
near nature environment of the museum (Kuesnacht, Switzerland).

    As the subject is „nature“, our designers decided to use „nature materials“ 
and I agreed to do so. Now, I wouldn’t do it anymore…

    Because: we now have bugs in the exhibition-room. A biologist told me that 
they must be Anthrenus, probably Anthrenus verbasci. The grubs/worms must be in 
the wood we used and the bugs are lying near the window, most of them dead.

    As the removing of the wood would probably be the end of the exhibition (it 
should actually not end before october…), I would like to know the risks and 
the problems and what else I could do instead of removing the wood… 

    Fortunately we don’t have our collection/museum-objects in this room except 
some « dead birds ». And it wouldn’t be a problem, if the worms will stay in 
the wood and eat this wood, in which they’ve come into the museum.

    Do the worms eat only the bark of the wood – will it be a big problem for 
the room itself (wooden ceiling…), because now the bugs are lying their eggs 
everywhere? And will they destroy the objects of our next exhibition in this 
room? What are they eating actually? 

    What do I have to do concerning the room…?

    I send you a few pictures – it would be great, if you could help me or tell 
me who I could/should ask. 

    A big « thankyou » in advance and please excuse my English…

    Best regards
    Elisabeth Abgottspon


    (grundsätzlich am Dienstag, Mittwoch und Donnerstag im Ortsmuseum)

    Öffnungszeiten des Museums: Mittwoch, Samstag und Sonntag von 14 Uhr bis 17 
Uhr.

    
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Elisabeth Abgottspon
    Kuratorin/Museumsleiterin
    Ortsmuseum Kuesnacht
    Tobelweg 1
    8700 Küsnacht
    Tel. 0041 44 910 59 70

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