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The Barger home is well over 100 years old -- I think close to 150.  It is 
solid brick.  Local legend has it that it was the home of Wild Bill Hickok when 
he was town marshall of DeSoto, KS.  My home was built in 1976 and is typical 
of current building, with wood siding and a couple of stone veneer walls.  I 
keep and monitor sticky traps in the basement and, due my efforts toward 
exclusion, I have few insects or spiders in the home - a very occasional brown 
recluse.  My wife doesn't know about those.
 
Forrest E. St. Aubin, BCE
Liaison, ESA/NPMA
Chair, ESA-ACE Oversight Committee
12835 Pembroke Circle - Leawood, Kansas 66209
Phone: 913.927.9588 - Fax: 913.345.8008
E-mail: [email protected]
Website: www.saintaubinbce.com

"The trouble with the world is not that people know too little, but that they 
know so many things that ain't so." - Mark Twain

 
 -----Original Message-----
From: "Louis Sorkin" [[email protected]]
Date: 10/11/2012 10:28 AM
To: "[email protected]" 
Subject: RE: [pestlist] Brown Recluse

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Hi Forrest,I figured you knew about this home.  Your home is different 
construction and vintage?  Your neighbor’s home supports a large Loxosceles 
population but yours does not.Yes, I know you didn’t mention the tippy toe 
aspect but that’s normally what people think about spider tarsi and certain 
insect tarsi as well.  The inference is there and it is usually one reason the 
manufacturers give for their products not working.  But as we know, the product 
has to be placed in the right place to be effective.Lou From: 
[email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Forrest St. 
Aubin
Sent: Thursday, October 11, 2012 11:03 AM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [pestlist] Brown Recluse This is a message from the Museumpests 
List.
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Lou, Please note that I did not say anything about walking on tippy toes, 
although I guess that could have been inferred.  In truth, most PMPs don't put 
pesticides where they are needed most - behind, beneath, within. And, yes, 
direct hit works best and dusts are better than liquid sprays.
 
I am very familiar with Rick Vetter's work and he and I are in frequent 
contact.  The home referred to is just a few miles from mine and I am 
acquainted with the Bargers - Diane Barger is the junior author on the paper 
you cited.  They are my source of brown recluse spiders when I do testing work 
for Bayer (my former employer) and BASF.
 
Forrest E. St. Aubin, BCE
Liaison, ESA/NPMA
Chair, ESA-ACE Oversight Committee
12835 Pembroke Circle - Leawood, Kansas 66209
Phone: 913.927.9588 - Fax: 913.345.8008
E-mail: [email protected]
Website: www.saintaubinbce.com

"The trouble with the world is not that people know too little, but that they 
know so many things that ain't so." - Mark Twain
 
 -----Original Message-----
From: "Louis Sorkin" [[email protected]]
Date: 10/11/2012 09:40 AM
To: "[email protected]"
Subject: RE: [pestlist] Brown Recluse

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I believe Loxosceles reclusa, which would be called the Brown Recluse Spider, 
is the only species in the genus that occurs in Oklahoma.  We have had 
introduced species such as L. rufescens, the Mediterranean Recluse, in a few 
locations in NYC and these are established populations.  American roaches are a 
favorite food source. Tom also had collected this species from the Philadelphia 
area (he sent me specimens years ago).   There have been very few introductions 
of the Brown Recluse into NYC .  Loxosceles spiders can also go long periods of 
time without feeding.  Spiders in general have slow metabolisms.Actually the 
number collected by glue traps might not make a dent in the actual population.  
Here’s an example from around 2002 (J. Med. Entomol. 39(6): 948-951(2002)) 
where a colleague of mine investigated.  A person had been bitten during the 
time when the collecting process was undertaken, but not while living in the 
home. The spiders were both collected from glue boards (+- 800) and searched 
out (+- 1200) and hand collected.  You might want to read the article – there’s 
a description of the home and construction details.Online reference to 
story:Over a 6 month period, “…2,055 brown recluse spiders collected in a 
Kansas home of a family of four. Despite the abundance of spiders, no one in 
the family received bites from the potentially dangerous arachnids.”Lou Louis 
N. Sorkin, B.C.E.Entomologist, ArachnologistDivision of Invertebrate 
ZoologyAmerican Museum of Natural HistoryCentral Park West at 79th StreetNew 
York, New York [email protected] voice212-769-5277 fax The 
New York Entomological Society, Inc.www.nyentsoc.org [email protected]    From: 
[email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
[email protected]
Sent: Thursday, October 11, 2012 7:20 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [pestlist] Brown Recluse This is a message from the Museumpests 
List.
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Director Timothy -
 
Oklahoma is a hotbed of Brown Recluse Spiders.  In order to give you some help 
with your situation, I'd have to know more about the construction of your 
building.  Is there a basement?  A crawlspace?  What surrounds the building?  
Does anyone actually live full time in the building?  You've certainly made a 
dent in the population with your trapping program.
 
Tom Parker
-----Original Message-----
From: John Timothy <[email protected]>
To: pestlist <[email protected]>
Sent: Wed, Oct 10, 2012 1:15 pm
Subject: [pestlist] Brown RecluseThis is a message from the Museumpests List.
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I have been monitering our museum using sticky traps spread every 10 feet 
throughout. A significant number of brown recluse spiders were caught, seventy 
in a two month period of time. Fishing for suggestions on other ways to control 
them besides sticky traps. I gather insecticides are largely ineffective.

--
John Timothy
Ataloa Lodge Museum
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