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Thank you Gretchen.  Most helpful.  There seems to be a lot of very useful
(and free..) information out there that small museums can access to inform
and assist with their IPM.  I quite agree that the cost of doing nothing can
far outweigh the cost of monitoring and taking action where necessary.  I
assume that you would recommend risk zoning a collection and setting traps
accordingly?

 

Regards

Linda

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
Anderson, Gretchen
Sent: 26 February 2013 21:33
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [pestlist] Threshold levels

 

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Hi Amy, 

 

There is no hard and fast rule on setting thresholds.  There are simply to
many variables - the location of the museum, surrounding environments, the
age of the building, the type of collection (some are more susceptible than
others).  The point of an IPM program is to reduce the level of risk to your
collection through best practices.  You need to find out what kind of pests
you have in the building so that you can strategically strike at the problem
(or pest). The threshold will depend on your situation.  The cost will
depend on your situation. 

 

You are correct, insects (and other) pests will get in the building.  You
monitor to determine if the insects are a direct or an indirect threat to
your collection. Yes, you might be catching only ground beetles and other
incidentals - but, in that case, you are setting yourself up for the insects
that eat dead beetles - and these are the same that will infest wool rugs
and wool clothing, hide and fur clothing, taxidermy, scientific specimens..
the list goes on and on. 

 

An integrated pest management program (IPM) will help you reduce the risk of
having an infestation. An IPM helps you develop strategies to keep your
collection free from infestation.  I know that does not help with your
question - but only you can determine what the threshold is.  Ideally we
would all like no pests - but since we live in the real world - IPM is the
best way to approach the problem. 

 

Linda - I agree with Tom. IPM can be very cost effective for small museums.
I have worked with many small regional, tribal and small university museums
through the IPM class I teach. My students have come up with some very
creative and very inexpensive ways to monitor for pests. One of the
efficiencies is that if you know who is getting in and where they are coming
from, you can often block the holes which will help any efforts to control
climate inside the building.  


Good luck!
Gretchen Anderson

Conservator

Carnegie Museum of Natural History

[email protected]

 

Instructor

MuseumClasses.org

 

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
Linda Kemp
Sent: Tuesday, February 26, 2013 1:35 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [pestlist] Threshold levels

 

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Hi Amy,

I'd be really interested in seeing what responses you get and hopefully I
will via Museumpests.net.   I'm currently looking at the cost effectiveness
of IPM in small museums and how it can be carried out on a very small or
non-existent budget, so this information would be very useful.

 

Kind regards

 

Linda Kemp

 

Linda Kemp

BSc Conservation Student

The Cass. School of Design

Sir John Cass Faculty of Art, Architecture & Design        
London Metropolitan University 
41 Commercial Road 
London E1 1LA 

e-mail: [email protected]    

 

 

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
Miller, Amy (FDA)
Sent: 26 February 2013 18:03
To: [email protected]
Subject: [pestlist] Threshold levels

 

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I am interested in finding out information about insect threshold levels in
museums and collections.  Obviously, insects can get into buildings and be
found on monitoring devices such as sticky traps, but they do not warrant
any type of control.  How do you determine control when nothing in
particular is infested?  Any resources on threshold levels would be greatly
appreciated.

   

Thank you,

Amy K. Miller


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