Hi Rachael

I have been playing phone tag with Jerry Shiner maybe we will catch each other 
soon. Anyway have you been able to make any more headway into the topic we 
discussed a few days ago. If this is more likely to happen than not then I will 
go to the GC Office for guidance. If not I will let it slide for now.

G Jackson Tanner
Supervisory Museum Specialist
MSC-Collections Support Services Office, MRC-534
Museum Support Center
4210 Silver Hill Road
Suitland, Maryland 20746-2863
301-238-1006 MSC Direct
301-238-1010 MSC General Office
301-238-1822 MSC Anoxic Chamber Room
301-238-3513 Fax
202-437-3784 Cell
202-633-6689 NHB-Direct
202-633-0725 NHB General Office

or

Smithsonian Institution NMNH, MRC-117
PO Box 37012
Washington, DC 20013
[email protected]
PJ
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Rachael Perkins Arenstein
Sent: Tuesday, April 12, 2011 8:05 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [pestlist] Carpet Beetle Pheromone Traps

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

[cid:[email protected]]
P.O. Box 1776
Williamsburg, VA 23187

(757)  220-7080
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

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