Dear Ryan and others,

We have a short tip sheet about pheromone traps on the museumpests.net
website that addresses your concerns.  It can be found in the Monitoring
section of the site under the Trapping tab.

 

Best,

Rachael

IPM-WG Co-Chair

 

 

Rachael Perkins Arenstein

A.M. Art Conservation, LLC

Art Conservation, Preservation & Collection Management

[email protected]

www.AMArtConservation.com

917-796-1764

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Jones, Robert (Ryan)
Sent: Tuesday, April 12, 2011 7:54 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [pestlist] Carpet Beetle Pheromone Traps

 

Hello all,

 

Recently, I purchased a case of Varied Carpet Beetle pheromone traps to
monitor for adult carpet beetle activity inside of a fabric storage facility
we have on property. This facility has a history of sporadic carpet beetle
activity, so it seemed logical at the time to install the pheromone traps so
that chances of early detection could be increased.

 

Since the installation of the traps, I have wondered about the wisdom of
using them in an area that does not have an active infestation of carpet
beetles. By their nature, do pheromone traps increase the likelihood of an
infestation by drawing carpet beetles into the area? If the radius of trap
attraction is, say, ten feet wide around the area of installation, the
chances of attracting adult carpet beetles from outside is somewhat remote.
If, however, the radius of attraction is much wider than that, there might
be a need to rethink the installation of the traps and go with a visual
inspection (which would be almost impossible given the volume of the
material) or some other means that would be less likely to create  problems.


 

Obviously, the detection of adult carpet beetles on a pheromone trap is only
an indicator light that would facilitate a thorough inspection of nearby
materials for activity since it is the larvae that cause the damage to the
fabric material. 

 

A post from anyone having experience with these pheromone traps would be a
great help!

 

 

Ryan Jones

 

Integrated Pest Management 

Specialist  

 

Colonial_Williamsburg_Logo.jpg

P.O. Box 1776

Williamsburg, VA 23187

 

(757)  220-7080

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

 

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