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I will also add my concurrence to the good advice that has been offered on the 
list.  Mary Lou Florian wrote of some issues with pheromone traps in her 
otherwise excellent publication Heritage Eaters and so the advice you received 
from the conservators is something that has persisted despite the general 
feeling in the pest management and entomology community that they are safe and 
useful tools.

 

We have a page on tips for using pheromone lures on the museumpests.net website

 <http://museumpests.net/monitoring-trapping/monitoring-pheromone-tips/> 
http://museumpests.net/monitoring-trapping/monitoring-pheromone-tips/

 

Cheers,

Rachael

IPM Working Group Co-chair

 

 

Rachael Perkins Arenstein

A.M. Art Conservation, LLC

917-796-1764

 <mailto:rach...@amartconservation.com> rach...@amartconservation.com

 <http://www.AMArtConservation.com> www.AMArtConservation.com 

 

From: pestlist-ow...@museumpests.net [mailto:pestlist-ow...@museumpests.net] On 
Behalf Of Paul Storch
Sent: Tuesday, November 28, 2017 2:57 PM
To: pestlist@museumpests.net
Subject: Re: [pestlist] Pheromone Pest Control Traps (UNCLASSIFIED)

 

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I agree with Pascal's cogent explanation below.  One of the key components in 
an effective IPM program is exclusion/structural integrity.  For any type of 
trapping program to work, efforts must be taken to physically exclude the pest 
from the structure.  If the 'conservators' were speaking in the context of 
large, porous structures such as warehouses, old barracks, hangars, or museums 
in re-purposed historic military buildings, then their warnings could be 
applicable.  As a blanket statement, however, it doesn't make much sense.

 

We have used pheromone traps in the Minnesota History Center to track down the 
source of a clothes moth infestation and they worked very well.

 

Paul Storch

Minnesota Historical Society

 

On Tue, Nov 28, 2017 at 1:36 PM, Pascal Querner <pascal.quer...@gmx.at 
<mailto:pascal.quer...@gmx.at> > wrote:

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Dear Scott,

 

I must say that the advice from the two conservators giving the course was not 
very precise!! I give a lot of IPM courses in Europe and other places, and 
usually we get this question at every workshop, here is my standard answer:

1. Yes it is possible that we attract animals from outside, but place pheromone 
traps in the center of the room at least 5-10m from windows and doors to 
prevent this. -> easy to prevent

2. Usually sex pheromones for moths and carpet beetles will only attract the 
males and you need a female laying eggs to start an infestation. -> so no big 
problem!

3. If I have the feeling that there is a source of moths outside of the 
building, this is a very important information and I place one trap inside and 
one outside to have a reliable answer to this question. If they really come 
from outside (a bird nest or dead animal can be a source of the infestation) 
your collection inside is at risk to get infested -> get rid of the problem

4. If you use food bait for mice (or some beetles) yes you can attract animals 
from outside so you have to think if the information is useful and important 
for you. 

Pheromone traps are a very important tool for the monitoring of many pests and 
I use hundreds for webbing clothes moths in many buildings, they collect a lot 
of important information’s for the IPM!!

 

All the best from Vienna,

 

Pascal

 

 

 

CLASSIFICATION: UNCLASSIFIED



Good morning. I work for the US Army at one of their museums and we use 
pheromone pest control traps, especially for carpet beetles. One of my staff 
was at a US Army museums course two weeks ago and was told by two conservators 
that all pheromone traps must be removed from all Army museums as they lure 
bugs in from outside with the pheromone - like through doors and windows. They 
stated that it attracts more insects in to the buildings and makes it more 
difficult to control pests (we have these pheromone traps as well as ground 
traps near doors and windows to catch anything coming in - no carpet beetles in 
the floor traps but we do get a couple in the pheromone traps). I have never 
heard of this happening before and wanted to check to see anyone has heard of 
this or knew approximately how far one of the pheromone traps "odor" went out 
from the trap. I just can't see that one of these small traps can lure insects 
through doors and walls like the two conservators stated. Any information you 
could provide would be greatly appreciated.



Thank you.



Scott A. Neel, PhD

Director / Curator

Fort Sill National Historic Landmark and Museum

US Army Fires Center of Excellence

372 Gannahl Road

Fort Sill, OK 73503

Office: 580-442-6570

Fax: 580-442-0552

Website:  
<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-3A__sill-2Dwww.army.mil_museum_&d=DwIGaQ&c=o14_68DQy6cMJf5D8ZSrZQ&r=h76q8gSEGveT_ArI6lhAokkItVFZcy_coqmo_UG_Ha8&m=0OBHW9YpYiFvGakDNIa6ni3MRohiGpDHHXMOFqI93Nc&s=fUw1bNv8j_qKJu9vhMDvpwrncaC2I-G9qNKNwRKCb2Y&e=>
 
https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-3A__sill-2Dwww.army.mil_museum_&d=DwIGaQ&c=o14_68DQy6cMJf5D8ZSrZQ&r=h76q8gSEGveT_ArI6lhAokkItVFZcy_coqmo_UG_Ha8&m=0OBHW9YpYiFvGakDNIa6ni3MRohiGpDHHXMOFqI93Nc&s=fUw1bNv8j_qKJu9vhMDvpwrncaC2I-G9qNKNwRKCb2Y&e=

Facebook:  
<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__www.facebook.com_pages_Fort-2DSill-2DNational-2DHistoric-2DLandmark-2Dand&d=DwIGaQ&c=o14_68DQy6cMJf5D8ZSrZQ&r=h76q8gSEGveT_ArI6lhAokkItVFZcy_coqmo_UG_Ha8&m=0OBHW9YpYiFvGakDNIa6ni3MRohiGpDHHXMOFqI93Nc&s=-1mwzgZbVQQtQoLPOjLD6FsEp34jkJsjEGDH8HH0pbs&e=>
 
https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__www.facebook.com_pages_Fort-2DSill-2DNational-2DHistoric-2DLandmark-2Dand&d=DwIGaQ&c=o14_68DQy6cMJf5D8ZSrZQ&r=h76q8gSEGveT_ArI6lhAokkItVFZcy_coqmo_UG_Ha8&m=0OBHW9YpYiFvGakDNIa6ni3MRohiGpDHHXMOFqI93Nc&s=-1mwzgZbVQQtQoLPOjLD6FsEp34jkJsjEGDH8HH0pbs&e=
 Museum/368889589827678



CLASSIFICATION: UNCLASSIFIED







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-- 

Paul S. Storch

Project Specialist III /Sites Collections and Exhibits Liaison

Facilities-Historic Properties Department

Facilities and Risk Management Division

Minnesota Historical Society

345 Kellogg Blvd. West

Saint Paul, MN 55102-1906

(651) 259-3257

 <mailto:paul.sto...@mnhs.org> paul.sto...@mnhs.org

 

Visit Historic Sites!

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