Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-17 Thread Brynn_Bender
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Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-17 Thread Brynn_Bender
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Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-17 Thread Janet_Pasiuk
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Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-17 Thread Anne_Ennes
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Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-17 Thread Anne_Ennes
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Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-10 Thread bugman22
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HAIL, HAIL!



-Original Message-
From: Iona McCraith 
To: pestlist 
Sent: Tue, Jan 10, 2012 3:08 pm
Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion


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i folks,
Could we please try not to request message received receipts for postings to 
he list.  When I returned from holidays I had a pretty full inbox and many 
ere simply people's reply to a request for a message received receipt.
Thanks in advance,
Iona McCraith
reservation Consultant
el: (705) 277-1309  Fax: (705) 277-2091
mail: preservat...@ruralwave.ca
 Original Message - 
rom: 
o: 
ent: Thursday, January 05, 2012 10:41 AM
ubject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

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Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-10 Thread Iona McCraith
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Hi folks,

Could we please try not to request message received receipts for postings to 
the list.  When I returned from holidays I had a pretty full inbox and many 
were simply people's reply to a request for a message received receipt.

Thanks in advance,

Iona McCraith
Preservation Consultant
Tel: (705) 277-1309  Fax: (705) 277-2091
Email: preservat...@ruralwave.ca
- Original Message - 
From: 
To: 
Sent: Thursday, January 05, 2012 10:41 AM
Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion


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Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-09 Thread Samantha_Richert
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Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-09 Thread Brynn_Bender
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Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-09 Thread Janet_Pasiuk
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Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-09 Thread Anne_Ennes
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Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-09 Thread Anne_Ennes
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Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-09 Thread Anne_Ennes
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Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-07 Thread Lou
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Dermestid beetle larvae don't have to chew into a carcass, but feed
on pieces, too. You find them in insect carcasses, but feed on shed
skins, too. Hair, feathers are eaten; small, dead, insects, too. 

On
Sat, 7 Jan 2012 19:33:26 -0500, bugma...@aol.com wrote: 

> This is a
message from the Museumpests List.
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email to pestlist@museumpests.net
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footer of this email.
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> 
> Group -

> 
> In order for carpet beetle larvae to feed on an insect carcass,
the carcass needs to be large enough for the larva to chew its way
inside. Small insects, like midges, would not be a suitable meal for
carpet beetle larvae. Most of the time, carpet beetle larvae feed on
wasp, beetle, fly, large moth, and cockroach carcasses, as well as dead
animals, such as birds, snakes, frogs, squirrels, mice and rats. 
> 
>
Tom Parker
> 
> -Original Message-
> From: Heather Thomas 
> To:
pestlist 
> Sent: Sat, Jan 7, 2012 1:01 pm
> Subject: Re: [pestlist]
LinkedIn discussion
> 
> This is a message from the Museumpests List.
>
To post to this list send it as an email to pestlist@museumpests.net
[1]
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>
---
> Hello
Shae, 
> I used to be a docent at The Hunt and was one of the first
Insect Inspectors (if only for a short time before returning to England
and studying the subject in greater depth at University) So I know how
close to the water you are. 
> 
> As has been pointed out the Pheromone
traps don't tend to drag in pests from outside, but never underestimate
the importance of catching 'Non-Real Pests' in the blunder traps. 
>
They are a very important indicator of all sorts of situations. The most
obvious is when you collect a lot of wood-lice or silverfish, indicating
a damp problem, Or a lot of spiders perhaps enticed in due to high
levels of flies. 
> Your large numbers of Dipterans may mean poor window
or door seals or a serious water ingress! They also provide a great
source of food for 'real' pests, but if you are checking (and chucking)
traps every 2 weeks hopefully they aren't around long enough to draw
attention. 
> 
> All the best 
> Heather Thomas 
> 
> On 3 Jan 2012, at
23:07, Shae wrote: 
> 
>> Hi Tom 
>> 
>> Our outdoor lighting at the
Hunt Museum is sodium vapour, so we're being very good. Even so, our
proximity to the Shannon river results in quite a high number of aquatic
flies (mostly Dipterans) that clutter up our blunder traps but are
harmless. Thus my interest in the pheromone traps, which would attract
only real pests.
> 
>
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-- 
--- 
Please consider the environment before
printing this e-mail

Louis N. Sorkin, B.C.E.
Entomology
Section
Division of Invertebrate Zoology
American Museum of Natural
History
Central Park West at 79th Street
New York, NY 10024-5192

phone:
212-769-5613
fax: 212-769-5277
email: sor...@amnh.org

The New York
Entomological Society, Inc.
email: n...@amnh.org
web:
www.nyentsoc.org
Online journal from 2001
forward
www.BioOne.org
www.jstor.org
  

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Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-07 Thread bugman22
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Group -

In order for carpet beetle larvae to feed on an insect carcass, the carcass 
needs to be large enough for the larva to chew its way inside.  Small insects, 
like midges, would not be a suitable meal for carpet beetle larvae.  Most of 
the time, carpet beetle larvae feed on wasp, beetle, fly, large moth, and 
cockroach carcasses, as well as dead animals, such as birds, snakes, frogs, 
squirrels, mice and rats.

Tom Parker



-Original Message-
From: Heather Thomas 
To: pestlist 
Sent: Sat, Jan 7, 2012 1:01 pm
Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion


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Hello Shae, 
I used to be a docent at The Hunt and was one of the first Insect Inspectors 
(if only for a short time before returning to England and studying the subject 
in greater depth at University) So I know how close to the water you are. 


As has been pointed out the Pheromone traps don't tend to drag in pests from 
outside, but never underestimate the importance of catching 'Non-Real Pests' in 
the blunder traps. 
They are a very important indicator of all sorts of situations. The most 
obvious is when you collect a lot of wood-lice or silverfish, indicating a damp 
problem, Or a lot of spiders perhaps enticed in due to high levels of flies. 
Your large numbers of Dipterans may mean poor window or door seals or a serious 
water ingress! They  also provide a great source of food for 'real' pests, but 
if you are checking (and chucking) traps every 2 weeks hopefully they aren't 
around long enough to draw attention.


All the best 
Heather Thomas


On 3 Jan 2012, at 23:07, Shae wrote:

Hi Tom 
 
Our outdoor lighting at the Hunt Museum is sodium vapour, so we’re being very 
good. Even so, our proximity to the Shannon river results in quite a high 
number of aquatic flies (mostly Dipterans) that clutter up our blunder traps 
but are harmless. Thus my interest in the pheromone traps, which would attract 
only real pests.



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Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-07 Thread Heather Thomas

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Hello Shae,
I used to be a docent at The Hunt and was one of the first Insect  
Inspectors (if only for a short time before returning to England and  
studying the subject in greater depth at University) So I know how  
close to the water you are.


As has been pointed out the Pheromone traps don't tend to drag in  
pests from outside, but never underestimate the importance of  
catching 'Non-Real Pests' in the blunder traps.
They are a very important indicator of all sorts of situations. The  
most obvious is when you collect a lot of wood-lice or silverfish,  
indicating a damp problem, Or a lot of spiders perhaps enticed in due  
to high levels of flies.
Your large numbers of Dipterans may mean poor window or door seals or  
a serious water ingress! They  also provide a great source of food  
for 'real' pests, but if you are checking (and chucking) traps every  
2 weeks hopefully they aren't around long enough to draw attention.


All the best
Heather Thomas

On 3 Jan 2012, at 23:07, Shae wrote:

Hi Tom



Our outdoor lighting at the Hunt Museum is sodium vapour, so we’re  
being very good. Even so, our proximity to the Shannon river  
results in quite a high number of aquatic flies (mostly Dipterans)  
that clutter up our blunder traps but are harmless. Thus my  
interest in the pheromone traps, which would attract only real pests.



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R: RE: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-07 Thread rgi...@tiscali.it
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I am pleased to inform all you that, since more tan 10 years here in 
Italy, Europe and Mediterranean Countries  we are successfully adopting 
the system VELOXY (VEry Low OXYgen) to carry out thye anoxia method in 
order to eradicate insect pests in museums, libraries and archives. The 
equipment was certified through an EU Project (Italy, Spain, United 
Kingdom and Sweden) You can find useful information and the references 
in our web site www.rgi-genova.com .
The equipment and materials to be 
used (consumables) are not expensive and very user friendly ; few days 
of training are sufficient to learn it's application usage.
Further 
detailed particulars can be asked just writing direclly to me at rgi.
g...@tiscali.it
Sincerely ERCOLE GIALDI
(president of RGI bioSteryl Tech 
s.r.l. Genova, Italy)  

Messaggio originale
Da: 
wrobert...@societyofthecincinnati.org
Data: 06/01/2012 20.29
A: 
"pestlist@museumpests.net"
Ogg: RE: 
[pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

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How easy is 
it to get Flexicubes in the US? Are there other domestic alternatives 
for those of us on this side of the pond?

Thanks!
Whitney Robertson


From: ad...@museumpests.net [mailto:ad...@museumpests.net] On Behalf Of 
Anderson, Gretchen
Sent: Friday, January 06, 2012 1:52 PM
To: 
pestlist@museumpests.net
Subject: RE: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion


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---
Thanks for 
the link!  Great discussion. It is always good to hear from others who 
are thinking outside of the box!

Gretchen



From: ad...@museumpests.net [mailto:ad...@museumpests.net]<mailto:[mailto:
ad...@museumpests.net]> On Behalf Of colin smith
Sent: Friday, January 
06, 2012 6:16 AM
To: pestlist@museumpests.net
Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion


Gretchen,

Yes, how nice it would be to live in an ideal world! But it 
can happen. I have been privileged to have been involved in a number of 
'ideal world' treatments. The biggest was the movement of virtually the 
entire collection of the Heritage Conservation Centre, Singapore. The 
huge collection was spread in many stores throughout Singapore. A brand 
new single storage facility was built and the collection was collected 
and moved to this new facility. However, before anything was allowed in 
it had to be placed in purpose built, huge (60 cubic metre) flexible 
aluminium chambers and stored under anoxic conditions. The move took 
more than 2 years. A very interesting experience. All the details are 
at http://www.hcc.sg/uploaded/file/IPM%20Article.pdf

In other 
situations where it not possible to close the whole building, like in a 
library for example, I have made a portable walls made from a wooden 
frame and polythene sheeting. This way you can section off parts of the 
building and do as I said in my previous email; Take the collection in 
just that section, cocoon the items (books) in FlexiCubes and when they 
are safely wrapped up, deep clean and spray that section, then move on. 
Some of the locations where I have done this have been free of 
infestations for many years.

The ZerO2 system is not just for delicate 
items. We use it for everything. It is particularly useful for large 
items which are too big for a freezer, like furniture.   I think this 
is the safest most gentle method there is. I have experienced to many 
horror stories involving freezing and heating methods. The breakthrough 
with this variant of anoxia has been the development the 1 kg low cost 
scavenger and the ability to seal the FlexiCubes with a domestic iron. 
As there are no registration issues it means that conservators can 
easily undertake the work themselves and not have to pay for external 
contractors to do the work. Many of our clients use this system and 
currently in the UK, one museum has their entire collection of 
Victorian clothing under anoxic conditions as we speak.

Hope this 
helps.

Please visit my websites where you can find all the 
information. http://www.csconserv.co.uk   and   http://conserv.biz/
If 
you have any questions please ask.

Colin

.
From: Anderson, 
Gretchen<mailto:anders...@carnegiemnh.org>
Sent: Thursday, January 05, 
2012 5:20 PM
To: pestlist@museumpests.net<mailto:pestlist@museumpests.
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Subject: RE:

Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

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Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

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Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

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Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

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Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-05 Thread Jane Hill
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I have recieved your information.
George Hill
morro...@cox.net
Gilcrease Museum
  - Original Message - 
  From: colin smith 
  To: pestlist@museumpests.net 
  Sent: Thursday, January 05, 2012 5:22 AM
  Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion


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  Gretchen,

  Yes, I totally agree, all sticky traps are monitors and should not be used 
for control. They also do not need to be as big as some currently available. 
This is why I am looking at developing a small, discreet little detector with a 
small glue area, which you can place in tight places. It only needs to catch a 
few insects. The monitors will be used to; alert a problem, identify the pest 
or pests and indicate the direction where they may have come from.

  When it comes to actual methods of control, if the infestation was throughout 
the building I would advocate placing all infected and delicate items into 
ZerO2 FlexiCubes and undertake an anoxic treatment. Whilst that was in progress 
and the collection was safely cocooned  I would use the time to deep clean the 
building and toughly spray with a residual insecticide. At the end of the 
exposure time, the FlexiCubes can be opened and the collection returned to 
display. And then a full IPM program should be instigated. 

  Colin Smith Conservation Ltd. Direct line Direct line 01444 400481. Mobile 
0672250 Webs;http://www.csconserv.co.uk/ & http://conserv.biz/ 
  Alternate email address:- colininnovat...@googlemail.com. Please copy all 
emails to this address.This email and the information it contains may contain 
confidential information which it could be a criminal offence for you to 
disclose without authority. If you are not an intended recipient please notify 
us immediately; please do not copy or disclose
  its contents to any person or body, and delete it from your computer systems. 
Email may be susceptible to data corruption, interception and unauthorised 
amendment, and we do not accept liability for any such corruption, interception 
or amendment or the consequences thereof.



  From: Anderson, Gretchen 
  Sent: Tuesday, January 03, 2012 10:29 PM
  To: mailto:pestlist@museumpests.net 
  Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion
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  Colin,

  Unfortunately, I do not have access to my linkedin account at this time, but 
will join the conversation as soon as I can.

  I agree with Tom - blunder traps are very effective in identifying the 
species that are present in a museum - both pest and non pest species. They are 
also an inexpesive way to start determining population density and 
distribution. These are the first steps that need to be taken with IPM. 

  Pheremone traps, when used properly, are good for focusing in on specific 
pests. Pheremones target specific species and not all museum pests have had 
their pheremones specifically distilled. We are not the primary market. In 
addition, pheremones attract only the male of the species.

  Blunder traps and pheremone traps are useful tools for monitoring pests only. 
Not for eliminating pests. 

  Hope this helps.

  Gretchen Anderson 
  Conservator
  Carnegie Museum of Natural History 
   

  From: colin smith [mailto:inhol...@btinternet.com] 
  Sent: Tuesday, January 03, 2012 02:09 PM
  To: pestlist@museumpests.net  
  Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion 
   

  Sorry Tom, I have to disagree. What you describe is what you say it is; A 
blunder trap. There is no doubt that the advances is pheromone technology has 
enabled the development very effective and accurate monitors, capable of 
detecting very small or new infestations. Blunder traps simply demonstrate how 
severe an infestation has become. For insects and even mice to be caught this 
way indicates severe infestations.  Not something of much use when you consider 
many museums following good IPM protocols regard one moth as a serious 
infestation!

  I’m not ‘re-inventing the wheel’ but rather trying to develop something which 
may bring us into the 21st century. A trap with a number of pheromone lures 
which will att

Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-05 Thread Anne_Ennes
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Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-05 Thread bugman22
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Group -

A small glueboard is already available from APG (Atlantic Paste and Glue Co., 
Brooklyn, NY).  It is the model number 100-1, Catchmaster Insect Trap and 
Monitor.  As it comes from the factory, the full gluebord, laid out flat, 
measures 7 1/2" x 8" and is perforated to be divided into 3 smaller traps.  The 
smaller traps are to be folded into a tent and can be placed along the 
floorline or can be placed or hung in the collections.  When a small one is 
folded, it measures 2 1/2" long x 2 1/2" deep x 1 1/2" tall.  There is an 
opening in it, which serves as a viewing port.  These are very handy for fabric 
and clothing collections.

Tom Parker



-Original Message-
From: colin smith 
To: pestlist 
Sent: Thu, Jan 5, 2012 6:24 am
Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion


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Gretchen,
 
Yes, I totally agree, all sticky traps are monitors and should not be used for 
control. They also do not need to be as big as some currently available. This 
is why I am looking at developing a small, discreet little detector with a 
small glue area, which you can place in tight places. It only needs to catch a 
few insects. The monitors will be used to; alert a problem, identify the pest 
or pests and indicate the direction where they may have come from.
 
When it comes to actual methods of control, if the infestation was throughout 
the building I would advocate placing all infected and delicate items into 
ZerO2 FlexiCubes and undertake an anoxic treatment. Whilst that was in progress 
and the collection was safely cocooned  I would use the time to deep clean the 
building and toughly spray with a residual insecticide. At the end of the 
exposure time, the FlexiCubes can be opened and the collection returned to 
display. And then a full IPM program should be instigated. 
 
Colin Smith Conservation Ltd. Direct line Direct line 01444 400481. Mobile 
0672250 Webs;http://www.csconserv.co.uk/ & http://conserv.biz/ 
Alternate email address:- colininnovat...@googlemail.com. Please copy all 
emails to this address.This email and the information it contains may contain 
confidential information which it could be a criminal offence for you to 
disclose without authority. If you are not an intended recipient please notify 
us immediately; please do not copy or disclose
its contents to any person or body, and delete it from your computer systems. 
Email may be susceptible to data corruption, interception and unauthorised 
amendment, and we do not accept liability for any such corruption, interception 
or amendment or the consequences thereof.

 
 

From: Anderson, Gretchen 
Sent: Tuesday, January 03, 2012 10:29 PM
To: mailto:pestlist@museumpests.net 
Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

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Colin,

Unfortunately, I do not have access to my linkedin account at this time, but 
will join the conversation as soon as I can.

I agree with Tom - blunder traps are very effective in identifying the species 
that are present in a museum - both pest and non pest species. They are also an 
inexpesive way to start determining population density and distribution. These 
are the first steps that need to be taken with IPM. 

Pheremone traps, when used properly, are good for focusing in on specific 
pests. Pheremones target specific species and not all museum pests have had 
their pheremones specifically distilled. We are not the primary market. In 
addition, pheremones attract only the male of the species.

Blunder traps and pheremone traps are useful tools for monitoring pests only. 
Not for eliminating pests. 

Hope this helps.

Gretchen Anderson 
Conservator
Carnegie Museum of Natural History 
 

From: colin smith [mailto:inhol...@btinternet.com] 
Sent: Tuesday, January 03, 2012 02:09 PM
To: pestlist@museumpests.net  
Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion 
 


Sorry Tom, I have to disagree. What you describe is what you say it is; A 
blunder trap. There is no doubt that the advances is pheromone technology has 
enabled the development very effective and accurate monitors, capabl

Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-05 Thread colin smith
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Gretchen,

Yes, I totally agree, all sticky traps are monitors and should not be used 
for control. They also do not need to be as big as some currently available. 
This is why I am looking at developing a small, discreet little detector 
with a small glue area, which you can place in tight places. It only needs 
to catch a few insects. The monitors will be used to; alert a problem, 
identify the pest or pests and indicate the direction where they may have 
come from.

When it comes to actual methods of control, if the infestation was 
throughout the building I would advocate placing all infected and delicate 
items into ZerO2 FlexiCubes and undertake an anoxic treatment. Whilst that 
was in progress and the collection was safely cocooned  I would use the time 
to deep clean the building and toughly spray with a residual insecticide. At 
the end of the exposure time, the FlexiCubes can be opened and the 
collection returned to display. And then a full IPM program should be 
instigated.

Colin Smith Conservation Ltd. Direct line Direct line 01444 400481. Mobile 
0672250 Webs;http://www.csconserv.co.uk/ & http://conserv.biz/
Alternate email address:- colininnovat...@googlemail.com. Please copy all 
emails to this address.This email and the information it contains may 
contain confidential information which it could be a criminal offence for 
you to disclose without authority. If you are not an intended recipient 
please notify us immediately; please do not copy or disclose
its contents to any person or body, and delete it from your computer 
systems. Email may be susceptible to data corruption, interception and 
unauthorised amendment, and we do not accept liability for any such 
corruption, interception or amendment or the consequences thereof.



From: Anderson, Gretchen
Sent: Tuesday, January 03, 2012 10:29 PM
To: mailto:pestlist@museumpests.net
Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion
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This is a message from the Museumpests List.
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Colin,

Unfortunately, I do not have access to my linkedin account at this time, but 
will join the conversation as soon as I can.

I agree with Tom - blunder traps are very effective in identifying the 
species that are present in a museum - both pest and non pest species. They 
are also an inexpesive way to start determining population density and 
distribution. These are the first steps that need to be taken with IPM.

Pheremone traps, when used properly, are good for focusing in on specific 
pests. Pheremones target specific species and not all museum pests have had 
their pheremones specifically distilled. We are not the primary market. In 
addition, pheremones attract only the male of the species.

Blunder traps and pheremone traps are useful tools for monitoring pests 
only. Not for eliminating pests.

Hope this helps.

Gretchen Anderson
Conservator
Carnegie Museum of Natural History


From: colin smith [mailto:inhol...@btinternet.com]
Sent: Tuesday, January 03, 2012 02:09 PM
To: pestlist@museumpests.net 
Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion


Sorry Tom, I have to disagree. What you describe is what you say it is; A 
blunder trap. There is no doubt that the advances is pheromone technology 
has enabled the development very effective and accurate monitors, capable of 
detecting very small or new infestations. Blunder traps simply demonstrate 
how severe an infestation has become. For insects and even mice to be caught 
this way indicates severe infestations.  Not something of much use when you 
consider many museums following good IPM protocols regard one moth as a 
serious infestation!

I’m not ‘re-inventing the wheel’ but rather trying to develop something 
which may bring us into the 21st century. A trap with a number of pheromone 
lures which will attract insects even if there are very few around; at a 
fair and reasonable price.
I can well understand museums using ineffective blunder traps, particularly 
when we all have to control costs. What I am trying to develop and offer is 
something in a similar price range which actually works!

All the best

Colin
From: bugma...@aol.com
Sent: Tuesday, January 03, 2012 6:37 PM
To: pestlist@museumpests.net
Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion
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Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-03 Thread bugman22
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Pat -

I might add - in urban situations, the WCM's are not following people; they're 
following pigeons.  Nesting pigeons are a huge urban source of natural WCM 
infestations.  To a lesser extent, certain dermestids are commonly found in 
smaller bird nests, especially English sparrows.  They are also common in mud 
dauber and wasps with paper nests.

Tom Parker



-Original Message-
From: Pat Kelley 
To:  
Cc: pestlist 
Sent: Tue, Jan 3, 2012 10:01 pm
Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion


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Tom and Gretchen make some good points.
When searching for specific infestations, pheromones are one of the best tools 
out there to focus our attention of where to inspect in large storage areas. It 
always comes down to a visual search, but pheromones can narrow the search to a 
much, much smaller area. 
Sex pheromones are only going to attract the male of the species, not a female 
with eggs or a reproductive pair. If breeding is going on in your storage or 
exhibit space, it was already there before the pheromones were introduced.
Many of the topics at the recent "2011 A Pest Odyssey" meeting in London showed 
how pheromones were used in museum settings to monitor and locate infestations 
of webbing clothes moth. The publication of these  topics just came out in 
December of 2011. http://www.pestodyssey.org/publication.php 
If you are worried about drawing in native populations living around the 
museum, you should keep the traps 15 meters away from any door that gets left 
opened on a regular basis. (Although I will say that if you are in this 
situation, you would probably be better off spending your time and resources to 
find a way to exclude outdoor pests with better door sweeps, lighting, screens 
and other exclusion methods. Another good way is to keep the door closed!)
If webbing clothes moth is the insect giving you the most problems, recent 
research has shown that you don't have to worry about drawing them in for 
outdoors if your museum is in a rural setting. Authors; Rudy Plarre and Bianca 
Krüger-Carstensen in their paper titled: “Outdoor trapping and genetical 
characterization of populations of webbing clothes moth Tineola bisselliella 
(Lepidoptera: Tineidae) in the broader area of Berlin” published in  J. Ent. 
Acaral. Res. Ser. II,43(2):129-135, Sept. 2011 showed that outdoor trapping in 
rural areas did not catch any moths, while numbers outdoors in the city were 
relatively high. These moths are clearly following people! 
Research and testing of multiple pheromones being used in single traps has been 
going on for many years and it continues. It often depends on the species you 
are trying to attract as to how well it will work. If you are just starting a 
monitoring program from scratch, I always recommend to first monitor with 
sticky "blunder" traps, then identify what you find and finally locate the 
source with pheromones only if there is a reliable sex pheromone available for 
that specific insect. 


Pat Kelley
Vice President
Insects Limited, Inc.



On Jan 3, 2012, at 8:28 PM, "bugma...@aol.com"  wrote:




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Group -
 
Dave Mueller of Insects Limited can attest to the expensive difficulty of 
isolating specific insect pheromones for particular species.  Unfortunately 
most insect species have one or more pheromones (let's say sex pheromones) 
specific to that particular species.  There's no such thing as a "general" 
pheromone, which can be synthesized for a range of species.  There might be a 
common bait attractant for, let's say, the more common cockroaches.  Or some 
kind of food attractant for the dermestids.  Perhaps that might be an avenue to 
research.
 
By the way, it is not true pheromone traps will entice insects into a museum.  
Pheromone trap lures do not have extensive "reach", i.e. they only cover a 
fairly small square footage of area.  So unless you put a webbing clothes moth 
pheromone trap just inside your dock door and you have a pigeon infestation on 
the roof nearby, such a pheromone trap would not "draw" WCM's into your 
building.
 
Tom Parker



-Original Message-
From: Anderson, Gretchen 
To: 'pestlist@museumpests.net' 
Sent: Tue, Jan 3, 2012 5:47 pm
Subjec

Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-03 Thread Pat Kelley
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Tom and Gretchen make some good points.
When searching for specific infestations, pheromones are one of the best tools 
out there to focus our attention of where to inspect in large storage areas. It 
always comes down to a visual search, but pheromones can narrow the search to a 
much, much smaller area.
Sex pheromones are only going to attract the male of the species, not a female 
with eggs or a reproductive pair. If breeding is going on in your storage or 
exhibit space, it was already there before the pheromones were introduced.
Many of the topics at the recent "2011 A Pest Odyssey" meeting in London showed 
how pheromones were used in museum settings to monitor and locate infestations 
of webbing clothes moth. The publication of these  topics just came out in 
December of 2011. http://www.pestodyssey.org/publication.php
If you are worried about drawing in native populations living around the 
museum, you should keep the traps 15 meters away from any door that gets left 
opened on a regular basis. (Although I will say that if you are in this 
situation, you would probably be better off spending your time and resources to 
find a way to exclude outdoor pests with better door sweeps, lighting, screens 
and other exclusion methods. Another good way is to keep the door closed!)
If webbing clothes moth is the insect giving you the most problems, recent 
research has shown that you don't have to worry about drawing them in for 
outdoors if your museum is in a rural setting. Authors; Rudy Plarre and Bianca 
Krüger-Carstensen in their paper titled: “Outdoor trapping and genetical 
characterization of populations of webbing clothes moth Tineola bisselliella 
(Lepidoptera: Tineidae) in the broader area of Berlin” published in  J. Ent. 
Acaral. Res. Ser. II,43(2):129-135, Sept. 2011 showed that outdoor trapping in 
rural areas did not catch any moths, while numbers outdoors in the city were 
relatively high. These moths are clearly following people!
Research and testing of multiple pheromones being used in single traps has been 
going on for many years and it continues. It often depends on the species you 
are trying to attract as to how well it will work. If you are just starting a 
monitoring program from scratch, I always recommend to first monitor with 
sticky "blunder" traps, then identify what you find and finally locate the 
source with pheromones only if there is a reliable sex pheromone available for 
that specific insect.

Pat Kelley
Vice President
Insects Limited, Inc.


On Jan 3, 2012, at 8:28 PM, "bugma...@aol.com<mailto:bugma...@aol.com>" 
mailto:bugma...@aol.com>> wrote:

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---
Group -

Dave Mueller of Insects Limited can attest to the expensive difficulty of 
isolating specific insect pheromones for particular species.  Unfortunately 
most insect species have one or more pheromones (let's say sex pheromones) 
specific to that particular species.  There's no such thing as a "general" 
pheromone, which can be synthesized for a range of species.  There might be a 
common bait attractant for, let's say, the more common cockroaches.  Or some 
kind of food attractant for the dermestids.  Perhaps that might be an avenue to 
research.

By the way, it is not true pheromone traps will entice insects into a museum.  
Pheromone trap lures do not have extensive "reach", i.e. they only cover a 
fairly small square footage of area.  So unless you put a webbing clothes moth 
pheromone trap just inside your dock door and you have a pigeon infestation on 
the roof nearby, such a pheromone trap would not "draw" WCM's into your 
building.

Tom Parker


-Original Message-
From: Anderson, Gretchen 
mailto:anders...@carnegiemnh.org>>
To: 'pestlist@museumpests.net<mailto:pestlist@museumpests.net>' 
mailto:pestlist@museumpests.net>>
Sent: Tue, Jan 3, 2012 5:47 pm
Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

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Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-03 Thread bugman22
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Shae -


 


LOL!  


 


Tom Parker





-Original Message-
From: Shae 
To: pestlist 
Sent: Tue, Jan 3, 2012 6:09 pm
Subject: RE: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion



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Hi Tom 


 


Our outdoor lighting at the Hunt Museum is sodium vapour, so we’re being very good. Even so, our proximity to the Shannon river results in quite a high number of aquatic flies (mostly Dipterans) that clutter up our blunder traps but are harmless. Thus my interest in the pheromone traps, which would attract only real pests.


 


However, I note Cindi’s concern that pheromone traps would actually attract pests, so I’m wondering how the proposed traps can avoid this. 


 


Meanwhile, getting back to lighting, we have a couple of items that might qualify for red. One is a sheela-na-gig who has lost her head and most of her legs, but she still has the important bits.


http://www.irelands-sheelanagigs.org/archive/images/157.jpg


 


The other is a self-portrait by Robert Fagan with his second wife, Maria. Apparently he was so devastated by the death of his first wife that he waited a whole six months to marry Maria.


 





 


 


Shae




From: ad...@museumpests.net [mailto:ad...@museumpests.net] On Behalf Of bugma...@aol.com
Sent: 03 January 2012 21:04
To: pestlist@museumpests.net
Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion



 


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Shae -





 





I might suggest changing your outdoor lighting to sodium vapor fixtures.  Most outdoor lighting is mercury vapor or incandescents.  The mercury vapor ones give off lots of UV light and attract midges and other flying and crawling insects to the building.  This in turn leads to lots of spiders.  Of course the least attractive light would be a red light, but we all know what that means.  





 





Tom Parker





ts.com or l...@zaks.com 


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Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-03 Thread bugman22
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Group -

Dave Mueller of Insects Limited can attest to the expensive difficulty of 
isolating specific insect pheromones for particular species.  Unfortunately 
most insect species have one or more pheromones (let's say sex pheromones) 
specific to that particular species.  There's no such thing as a "general" 
pheromone, which can be synthesized for a range of species.  There might be a 
common bait attractant for, let's say, the more common cockroaches.  Or some 
kind of food attractant for the dermestids.  Perhaps that might be an avenue to 
research.

By the way, it is not true pheromone traps will entice insects into a museum.  
Pheromone trap lures do not have extensive "reach", i.e. they only cover a 
fairly small square footage of area.  So unless you put a webbing clothes moth 
pheromone trap just inside your dock door and you have a pigeon infestation on 
the roof nearby, such a pheromone trap would not "draw" WCM's into your 
building.

Tom Parker



-Original Message-
From: Anderson, Gretchen 
To: 'pestlist@museumpests.net' 
Sent: Tue, Jan 3, 2012 5:47 pm
Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion


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Colin,

Unfortunately, I do not have access to my linkedin account at this time, but 
will join the conversation as soon as I can.

I agree with Tom - blunder traps are very effective in identifying the species 
that are present in a museum - both pest and non pest species. They are also an 
inexpesive way to start determining population density and distribution. These 
are the first steps that need to be taken with IPM. 

Pheremone traps, when used properly, are good for focusing in on specific 
pests. Pheremones target specific species and not all museum pests have had 
their pheremones specifically distilled. We are not the primary market. In 
addition, pheremones attract only the male of the species.

Blunder traps and pheremone traps are useful tools for monitoring pests only. 
Not for eliminating pests. 

Hope this helps.

Gretchen Anderson 
Conservator
Carnegie Museum of Natural History 
 

From: colin smith [mailto:inhol...@btinternet.com] 
Sent: Tuesday, January 03, 2012 02:09 PM
To: pestlist@museumpests.net  
Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion 
 


Sorry Tom, I have to disagree. What you describe is what you say it is; A 
blunder trap. There is no doubt that the advances is pheromone technology has 
enabled the development very effective and accurate monitors, capable of 
detecting very small or new infestations. Blunder traps simply demonstrate how 
severe an infestation has become. For insects and even mice to be caught this 
way indicates severe infestations.  Not something of much use when you consider 
many museums following good IPM protocols regard one moth as a serious 
infestation!
 
I’m not ‘re-inventing the wheel’ but rather trying to develop something which 
may bring us into the 21st century. A trap with a number of pheromone lures 
which will attract insects even if there are very few around; at a fair and 
reasonable price.
I can well understand museums using ineffective blunder traps, particularly 
when we all have to control costs. What I am trying to develop and offer is 
something in a similar price range which actually works!
 
All the best
 
Colin 


From: bugma...@aol.com 
Sent: Tuesday, January 03, 2012 6:37 PM
To: pestlist@museumpests.net 
Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

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Barbara -
 
As far as the museum community goes, flat, cardboard glueboards, manufactured 
by Atlantic Paste & Glue Co. of Brooklyn, NY or Bell Laboratories in Wisconsin 
and others are the best "multi-functional" insect traps on the market today.  
Even flying insects end up in these "blunder" traps.  Not only can you 
determine the kinds of insects getting caught (indoor or outdoor), you can 
often determine from which direction they're coming.  As an added bonus, mice 
can be caught on the larger ones.  And they're cheap!  Let's not reinvent the 
wheel.
 
Tom

RE: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-03 Thread Shae
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Hi Tom 

 

Our outdoor lighting at the Hunt Museum is sodium vapour, so we’re being very 
good. Even so, our proximity to the Shannon river results in quite a high 
number of aquatic flies (mostly Dipterans) that clutter up our blunder traps 
but are harmless. Thus my interest in the pheromone traps, which would attract 
only real pests.

 

However, I note Cindi’s concern that pheromone traps would actually attract 
pests, so I’m wondering how the proposed traps can avoid this. 

 

Meanwhile, getting back to lighting, we have a couple of items that might 
qualify for red. One is a sheela-na-gig who has lost her head and most of her 
legs, but she still has the important bits.

 <http://www.irelands-sheelanagigs.org/archive/images/157.jpg> 
http://www.irelands-sheelanagigs.org/archive/images/157.jpg

 

The other is a self-portrait by Robert Fagan with his second wife, Maria. 
Apparently he was so devastated by the death of his first wife that he waited a 
whole six months to marry Maria.

 

Painting, The Artist and his Wife

 

 

Shae

From: ad...@museumpests.net [mailto:ad...@museumpests.net] On Behalf Of 
bugma...@aol.com
Sent: 03 January 2012 21:04
To: pestlist@museumpests.net
Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

 

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Shae -

 

I might suggest changing your outdoor lighting to sodium vapor fixtures.  Most 
outdoor lighting is mercury vapor or incandescents.  The mercury vapor ones 
give off lots of UV light and attract midges and other flying and crawling 
insects to the building.  This in turn leads to lots of spiders.  Of course the 
least attractive light would be a red light, but we all know what that means.  
Image removed by sender. :-)

 

Tom Parker



ts.com or l...@zaks.com 



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<><>

RE: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-03 Thread Kaplan, Emily
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Regarding FAQ's on  pheromone traps, I would refer folks to the tips  on 
museumpests.net http://www.museumpests.net/monitoring.asp
and to the very useful information on the insectslimited.com site  
http://www.insectslimited.com/help

happy new year to all
Emily

From: ad...@museumpests.net [mailto:ad...@museumpests.net] On Behalf Of Cindi 
Verser
Sent: Tuesday, January 03, 2012 4:48 PM
To: pestlist@museumpests.net
Subject: RE: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

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Dear list,
Pheromone traps are an interesting idea, but I have to wonder if they would be 
the best thing for every institution.  Would they be an invitation for the 
pests to head inside instead of a tool to eliminate them?

We are surrounded by hundreds of acres of woods and multiple bodies of water,  
so I have seen at least one of every possible pest showing up on the blunder 
traps.  In the past we have captured everything from bugs and mice in the 
buildings to squirrels in the ceilings and snakes in the outbuildings.  Some of 
them  came in to get warm and the snakes were following the scent of the bugs.

I have had great success in controlling, and in some cases completely 
eliminating ,the bugs and vermin by using the blunder traps, educating the 
staff on pest control management and by knowing what types of issues to look 
for.I respectfully disagree that trapping one mouse or bug means we have an 
infestation.  It just means we have the traps in the right places so they are 
getting caught right as they enter the buildings.  I follow up on the catches 
by identifying and filling in holes, cracks and crevices to prevent further 
ingress.So far, so good.  At least no squirrels, snakes or mice and a very 
small number of bugs in the last two years!And no damage to the collections.

While they wouldn't work for us, I applaud your idea Colin.

Regards,
Cindi Verser









From: ad...@museumpests.net<mailto:ad...@museumpests.net> 
[mailto:ad...@museumpests.net<mailto:ad...@museumpests.net>] On Behalf Of Shae
Sent: Tuesday, January 03, 2012 3:20 PM
To: pestlist@museumpests.net<mailto:pestlist@museumpests.net>
Subject: RE: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

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Dear list

By way of introduction, I've been a docent with the Hunt Museum, Limerick, 
Ireland, for about 15 years. Since my retirement from my 'real' job as 
environmental scientist, the museum has coerced me into becoming its pest 
monitor.

We use 'blunder' traps which I check every 2 weeks or so. Because of our 
proximity to the river Shannon, the traps often contain quite a few insects 
such as midges that emerge from the aquatic environment.  I believe the use of 
pheromone attractants would make my job a lot easier because it would attract 
only those pests of concern.

I'd like to hear more.

Regards

Shae Clancy

From: ad...@museumpests.net<mailto:ad...@museumpests.net> 
[mailto:ad...@museumpests.net] On Behalf Of colin smith
Sent: 03 January 2012 19:09
To: pestlist@museumpests.net<mailto:pestlist@museumpests.net>
Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

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Sorry Tom, I have to disagree. What you describe is what you say it is; A 
blunder trap. There is no doubt that the advances is pheromone technology has 
enabled the development very effective and accurate monitors, capable of 
detecting very small or new infestations. Blunder traps simply demonstrate how 
severe an infestation has become. For insects and even mice to be caught this 
way indicates severe infestations.  Not something of much use when you consider 
many museums following good IPM protocols regard one moth as a serious 
infestation!

I'm not 're-inventing the wheel' but rather trying to develop something which 
may bring us into the 21st century. A trap with a number of pheromone lures 
which will attract insects even if there are very few around; at a fair and 
reasonable price.
I can well understand museums using ineffective blunder

Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-03 Thread Anderson, Gretchen
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Colin,

Unfortunately, I do not have access to my linkedin account at this time, but 
will join the conversation as soon as I can.

I agree with Tom - blunder traps are very effective in identifying the species 
that are present in a museum - both pest and non pest species. They are also an 
inexpesive way to start determining population density and distribution. These 
are the first steps that need to be taken with IPM.

Pheremone traps, when used properly, are good for focusing in on specific 
pests. Pheremones target specific species and not all museum pests have had 
their pheremones specifically distilled. We are not the primary market. In 
addition, pheremones attract only the male of the species.

Blunder traps and pheremone traps are useful tools for monitoring pests only. 
Not for eliminating pests.

Hope this helps.

Gretchen Anderson
Conservator
Carnegie Museum of Natural History

From: colin smith [mailto:inhol...@btinternet.com]
Sent: Tuesday, January 03, 2012 02:09 PM
To: pestlist@museumpests.net 
Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

Sorry Tom, I have to disagree. What you describe is what you say it is; A 
blunder trap. There is no doubt that the advances is pheromone technology has 
enabled the development very effective and accurate monitors, capable of 
detecting very small or new infestations. Blunder traps simply demonstrate how 
severe an infestation has become. For insects and even mice to be caught this 
way indicates severe infestations.  Not something of much use when you consider 
many museums following good IPM protocols regard one moth as a serious 
infestation!

I’m not ‘re-inventing the wheel’ but rather trying to develop something which 
may bring us into the 21st century. A trap with a number of pheromone lures 
which will attract insects even if there are very few around; at a fair and 
reasonable price.
I can well understand museums using ineffective blunder traps, particularly 
when we all have to control costs. What I am trying to develop and offer is 
something in a similar price range which actually works!

All the best

Colin
From: bugma...@aol.com<mailto:bugma...@aol.com>
Sent: Tuesday, January 03, 2012 6:37 PM
To: pestlist@museumpests.net<mailto:pestlist@museumpests.net>
Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion
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Barbara -

As far as the museum community goes, flat, cardboard glueboards, manufactured 
by Atlantic Paste & Glue Co. of Brooklyn, NY or Bell Laboratories in Wisconsin 
and others are the best "multi-functional" insect traps on the market today.  
Even flying insects end up in these "blunder" traps.  Not only can you 
determine the kinds of insects getting caught (indoor or outdoor), you can 
often determine from which direction they're coming.  As an added bonus, mice 
can be caught on the larger ones.  And they're cheap!  Let's not reinvent the 
wheel.

Tom Parker


-Original Message-
From: Appelbaum & Himmelstein 
To: pestlist 
Sent: Tue, Jan 3, 2012 10:58 am
Subject: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

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The ICOM members list on LinkedIn is having a discussion about the possibility 
of developing a multi-functional insect trap.  I suggested that they post on 
the pest list as well.  If they don't, those of you who are interested should 
go on to the LinkedIn site to put in your two cents.
Barbara Appelbaum

This is the posting: Monitoring Dear all, I am considering the development of a 
multi functional insect trap / monitor which will trap the most common insects 
in one simple unit. Is there a need for something like 
this?<http://www.linkedin.com/e/-vwzbz4-gwyxkeid-39/vaq/86916113/1769357/63158651/view_disc/?hs=false&tok=1crFS8Vsfg7l41>






[X]



[X]



[X]



[X]



[X]



[X]



[X]



[X]
























--






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you are not the intended recipient, please 

Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-03 Thread Anderson, Gretchen
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Agreed!! Unfortunately the museum world is not the primary audience for 
pheremone developement. It would be great if there was a general pheremone for 
the large number of dermestid species out there!

Gretchen

From: Rick Kerschner [mailto:rkersch...@shelburnemuseum.org]
Sent: Tuesday, January 03, 2012 05:07 PM
To: pestlist@museumpests.net 
Subject: RE: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

I have been using traps with pheromone attractants for both webbing and case 
making moths and it would be useful to have one to attract both types of moths 
as well as black or varied carpet beetles. Perhaps the cost would be 
prohibitive, but if Colin is interested in pursuing it, I so go for it.
Rick

Richard L. Kerschner
Director of Preservation and Conservation
Shelburne Museum
PO Box 10, Route 7
Shelburne, VT   05482
(802) 985-3348 x3361
rkersch...@shelburnemuseum.org


From: ad...@museumpests.net [mailto:ad...@museumpests.net] On Behalf Of colin 
smith
Sent: Tuesday, January 03, 2012 2:09 PM
To: pestlist@museumpests.net
Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

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Sorry Tom, I have to disagree. What you describe is what you say it is; A 
blunder trap. There is no doubt that the advances is pheromone technology has 
enabled the development very effective and accurate monitors, capable of 
detecting very small or new infestations. Blunder traps simply demonstrate how 
severe an infestation has become. For insects and even mice to be caught this 
way indicates severe infestations.  Not something of much use when you consider 
many museums following good IPM protocols regard one moth as a serious 
infestation!

I’m not ‘re-inventing the wheel’ but rather trying to develop something which 
may bring us into the 21st century. A trap with a number of pheromone lures 
which will attract insects even if there are very few around; at a fair and 
reasonable price.
I can well understand museums using ineffective blunder traps, particularly 
when we all have to control costs. What I am trying to develop and offer is 
something in a similar price range which actually works!

All the best

Colin
From: bugma...@aol.com<mailto:bugma...@aol.com>
Sent: Tuesday, January 03, 2012 6:37 PM
To: pestlist@museumpests.net<mailto:pestlist@museumpests.net>
Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion
This is a message from the Museumpests List.
To post to this list send it as an email to pestlist@museumpests.net
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---
Barbara -

As far as the museum community goes, flat, cardboard glueboards, manufactured 
by Atlantic Paste & Glue Co. of Brooklyn, NY or Bell Laboratories in Wisconsin 
and others are the best "multi-functional" insect traps on the market today.  
Even flying insects end up in these "blunder" traps.  Not only can you 
determine the kinds of insects getting caught (indoor or outdoor), you can 
often determine from which direction they're coming.  As an added bonus, mice 
can be caught on the larger ones.  And they're cheap!  Let's not reinvent the 
wheel.

Tom Parker


-Original Message-
From: Appelbaum & Himmelstein 
To: pestlist 
Sent: Tue, Jan 3, 2012 10:58 am
Subject: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

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To post to this list send it as an email to 
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---
The ICOM members list on LinkedIn is having a discussion about the possibility 
of developing a multi-functional insect trap.  I suggested that they post on 
the pest list as well.  If they don't, those of you who are interested should 
go on to the LinkedIn site to put in your two cents.
Barbara Appelbaum

This is the posting: Monitoring Dear all, I am considering the development of a 
multi functional insect trap / monitor which will trap the most common insects 
in one simple unit. Is there a need for something like 
this?<http://www.linkedin.com/e/-vwzbz4-gwyxkeid-39/vaq/86916113/1769357/63158651/view_disc/?hs=false&tok=

RE: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-03 Thread Rick Kerschner
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I have been using traps with pheromone attractants for both webbing and
case making moths and it would be useful to have one to attract both
types of moths as well as black or varied carpet beetles. Perhaps the
cost would be prohibitive, but if Colin is interested in pursuing it, I
so go for it. 
Rick 
 
Richard L. Kerschner
Director of Preservation and Conservation
Shelburne Museum
PO Box 10, Route 7
Shelburne, VT   05482
(802) 985-3348 x3361
rkersch...@shelburnemuseum.org



From: ad...@museumpests.net [mailto:ad...@museumpests.net] On Behalf Of
colin smith
Sent: Tuesday, January 03, 2012 2:09 PM
To: pestlist@museumpests.net
Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion


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Sorry Tom, I have to disagree. What you describe is what you say it is;
A blunder trap. There is no doubt that the advances is pheromone
technology has enabled the development very effective and accurate
monitors, capable of detecting very small or new infestations. Blunder
traps simply demonstrate how severe an infestation has become. For
insects and even mice to be caught this way indicates severe
infestations.  Not something of much use when you consider many museums
following good IPM protocols regard one moth as a serious infestation!
 
I'm not 're-inventing the wheel' but rather trying to develop something
which may bring us into the 21st century. A trap with a number of
pheromone lures which will attract insects even if there are very few
around; at a fair and reasonable price.
I can well understand museums using ineffective blunder traps,
particularly when we all have to control costs. What I am trying to
develop and offer is something in a similar price range which actually
works!
 
All the best
 
Colin 
From: bugma...@aol.com 
Sent: Tuesday, January 03, 2012 6:37 PM
To: pestlist@museumpests.net 
Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion
This is a message from the Museumpests List.
To post to this list send it as an email to pestlist@museumpests.net
To unsubscribe please look at the footer of this email.
---

Barbara -
 
As far as the museum community goes, flat, cardboard glueboards,
manufactured by Atlantic Paste & Glue Co. of Brooklyn, NY or Bell
Laboratories in Wisconsin and others are the best "multi-functional"
insect traps on the market today.  Even flying insects end up in these
"blunder" traps.  Not only can you determine the kinds of insects
getting caught (indoor or outdoor), you can often determine from which
direction they're coming.  As an added bonus, mice can be caught on the
larger ones.  And they're cheap!  Let's not reinvent the wheel.
 
Tom Parker



-Original Message-
From: Appelbaum & Himmelstein 
To: pestlist 
Sent: Tue, Jan 3, 2012 10:58 am
Subject: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion


This is a message from the Museumpests List.
To post to this list send it as an email to pestlist@museumpests.net
To unsubscribe please look at the footer of this email.
---
The ICOM members list on LinkedIn is having a discussion about the
possibility of developing a multi-functional insect trap.  I suggested
that they post on the pest list as well.  If they don't, those of you
who are interested should go on to the LinkedIn site to put in your two
cents. 
Barbara Appelbaum

 
This is the posting: Monitoring Dear all, I am considering the
development of a multi functional insect trap / monitor which will trap
the most common insects in one simple unit. Is there a need for
something like this?
<http://www.linkedin.com/e/-vwzbz4-gwyxkeid-39/vaq/86916113/1769357/6315
8651/view_disc/?hs=false&tok=1crFS8Vsfg7l41> 






 

 



 



 



 



 



 



 



 






 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 



 
-- 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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privileged. If you are not the intended recipient, please notify the
sender and delete all copies of this transmission along with any
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RE: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-03 Thread Cindi Verser
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Dear list,

Pheromone traps are an interesting idea, but I have to wonder if they would
be the best thing for every institution.  Would they be an invitation for
the pests to head inside instead of a tool to eliminate them?



We are surrounded by hundreds of acres of woods and multiple bodies of
water,  so I have seen at least one of every possible pest showing up on
the blunder traps.  In the past we have captured everything from bugs and
mice in the buildings to squirrels in the ceilings and snakes in the
outbuildings.  Some of them  came in to get warm and the snakes were
following the scent of the bugs.



I have had great success in controlling, and in some cases completely
eliminating ,the bugs and vermin by using the blunder traps, educating the
staff on pest control management and by knowing what types of issues to
look for.I respectfully disagree that trapping one mouse or bug means
we have an infestation.  It just means we have the traps in the right
places so they are getting caught right as they enter the buildings.  I
follow up on the catches by identifying and filling in holes, cracks and
crevices to prevent further ingress.So far, so good.  At least no
squirrels, snakes or mice and a very small number of bugs in the last two
years!And no damage to the collections.



While they wouldn’t work for us, I applaud your idea Colin.



Regards,

Cindi Verser



















*From:* ad...@museumpests.net [mailto:ad...@museumpests.net] *On Behalf Of *
Shae
*Sent:* Tuesday, January 03, 2012 3:20 PM
*To:* pestlist@museumpests.net
*Subject:* RE: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion



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To post to this list send it as an email to pestlist@museumpests.net
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---

Dear list



By way of introduction, I’ve been a docent with the Hunt Museum, Limerick,
Ireland, for about 15 years. Since my retirement from my ‘real’ job as
environmental scientist, the museum has coerced me into becoming its pest
monitor.



We use ‘blunder’ traps which I check every 2 weeks or so. Because of our
proximity to the river Shannon, the traps often contain quite a few insects
such as midges that emerge from the aquatic environment.  I believe the use
of pheromone attractants would make my job a lot easier because it would
attract only those pests of concern.



I’d like to hear more.



Regards



Shae Clancy



*From:* ad...@museumpests.net
[mailto:ad...@museumpests.net]
*On Behalf Of *colin smith
*Sent:* 03 January 2012 19:09
*To:* pestlist@museumpests.net
*Subject:* Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion



This is a message from the Museumpests List.
To post to this list send it as an email to pestlist@museumpests.net
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---

Sorry Tom, I have to disagree. What you describe is what you say it is; A
blunder trap. There is no doubt that the advances is pheromone technology
has enabled the development very effective and accurate monitors, capable
of detecting very small or new infestations. Blunder traps simply
demonstrate how severe an infestation has become. For insects and even mice
to be caught this way indicates severe infestations.  Not something of much
use when you consider many museums following good IPM protocols regard one
moth as a serious infestation!



I’m not ‘re-inventing the wheel’ but rather trying to develop something
which may bring us into the 21st century. A trap with a number of pheromone
lures which will attract insects even if there are very few around; at a
fair and reasonable price.

I can well understand museums using ineffective blunder traps, particularly
when we all have to control costs. What I am trying to develop and offer is
something in a similar price range which actually works!



All the best



Colin

*From:* bugma...@aol.com

*Sent:* Tuesday, January 03, 2012 6:37 PM

*To:* pestlist@museumpests.net

*Subject:* Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

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---

Barbara -



As far as the museum community goes, flat, cardboard glueboards,
manufactured by Atlantic Paste & Glue Co. of Brooklyn, NY or Bell
Laboratories in Wisconsin and others are the best "multi-functional" insect
traps on the market today.  Even flying insects end up in these "blunder"
traps.  Not only can you determine the kinds of insects getting caught
(indoor or outdoor), you can often determ

Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-03 Thread Brynn_Bender
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Return Receipt
   
   Your   Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion   
   document:   
   
   wasbrynn_ben...@nps.gov 
   received
   by: 
   
   at:01/03/2012 02:14:39 PM MST   
   






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Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-03 Thread Janet_Pasiuk
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Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-03 Thread bugman22
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Shae -

I might suggest changing your outdoor lighting to sodium vapor fixtures.  Most 
outdoor lighting is mercury vapor or incandescents.  The mercury vapor ones 
give off lots of UV light and attract midges and other flying and crawling 
insects to the building.  This in turn leads to lots of spiders.  Of course the 
least attractive light would be a red light, but we all know what that means.  

Tom Parker



-Original Message-
From: Shae 
To: pestlist 
Sent: Tue, Jan 3, 2012 3:48 pm
Subject: RE: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion


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Dear list
 
By way of introduction, I’ve been a docent with the Hunt Museum, Limerick, 
Ireland, for about 15 years. Since my retirement from my ‘real’ job as 
environmental scientist, the museum has coerced me into becoming its pest 
monitor. 
 
We use ‘blunder’ traps which I check every 2 weeks or so. Because of our 
proximity to the river Shannon, the traps often contain quite a few insects 
such as midges that emerge from the aquatic environment.  I believe the use of 
pheromone attractants would make my job a lot easier because it would attract 
only those pests of concern.
 
I’d like to hear more.
 
Regards
 
Shae Clancy  
 

From: ad...@museumpests.net [mailto:ad...@museumpests.net] On Behalf Of colin 
smith
Sent: 03 January 2012 19:09
To: pestlist@museumpests.net
Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

 
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Sorry Tom, I have to disagree. What you describe is what you say it is; A 
blunder trap. There is no doubt that the advances is pheromone technology has 
enabled the development very effective and accurate monitors, capable of 
detecting very small or new infestations. Blunder traps simply demonstrate how 
severe an infestation has become. For insects and even mice to be caught this 
way indicates severe infestations.  Not something of much use when you consider 
many museums following good IPM protocols regard one moth as a serious 
infestation!

 

I’m not ‘re-inventing the wheel’ but rather trying to develop something which 
may bring us into the 21st century. A trap with a number of pheromone lures 
which will attract insects even if there are very few around; at a fair and 
reasonable price.

I can well understand museums using ineffective blunder traps, particularly 
when we all have to control costs. What I am trying to develop and offer is 
something in a similar price range which actually works!

 

All the best

 

Colin 



From: bugma...@aol.com 

Sent: Tuesday, January 03, 2012 6:37 PM

To: pestlist@museumpests.net 

Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion



This is a message from the Museumpests List.
To post to this list send it as an email to pestlist@museumpests.net
To unsubscribe please look at the footer of this email.
---

Barbara -

 

As far as the museum community goes, flat, cardboard glueboards, manufactured 
by Atlantic Paste & Glue Co. of Brooklyn, NY or Bell Laboratories in Wisconsin 
and others are the best "multi-functional" insect traps on the market today.  
Even flying insects end up in these "blunder" traps.  Not only can you 
determine the kinds of insects getting caught (indoor or outdoor), you can 
often determine from which direction they're coming.  As an added bonus, mice 
can be caught on the larger ones.  And they're cheap!  Let's not reinvent the 
wheel.

 

Tom Parker



-Original Message-
From: Appelbaum & Himmelstein 
To: pestlist 
Sent: Tue, Jan 3, 2012 10:58 am
Subject: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

This is a message from the Museumpests List.
To post to this list send it as an email to pestlist@museumpests.net
To unsubscribe please look at the footer of this email.
---
The ICOM members list on LinkedIn is having a discussion about the possibility 
of developing a multi-functional insect trap.  I suggested that they post on 
the pest list as well.  If they don't, those of you who are interested should 
go on to the LinkedIn site to put in your two cents. 

Barbara Appelbaum

 

This is the posting: Monitoring Dear all, I am considering the development of a 
multi functional insect trap / monitor which will trap the most common insects 
in one simp

RE: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-03 Thread Shae
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To unsubscribe please look at the footer of this email.
---
Dear list

 

By way of introduction, I’ve been a docent with the Hunt Museum, Limerick, 
Ireland, for about 15 years. Since my retirement from my ‘real’ job as 
environmental scientist, the museum has coerced me into becoming its pest 
monitor. 

 

We use ‘blunder’ traps which I check every 2 weeks or so. Because of our 
proximity to the river Shannon, the traps often contain quite a few insects 
such as midges that emerge from the aquatic environment.  I believe the use of 
pheromone attractants would make my job a lot easier because it would attract 
only those pests of concern.

 

I’d like to hear more.

 

Regards

 

Shae Clancy  

 

From: ad...@museumpests.net [mailto:ad...@museumpests.net] On Behalf Of colin 
smith
Sent: 03 January 2012 19:09
To: pestlist@museumpests.net
Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

 

This is a message from the Museumpests List.
To post to this list send it as an email to pestlist@museumpests.net
To unsubscribe please look at the footer of this email.
---

Sorry Tom, I have to disagree. What you describe is what you say it is; A 
blunder trap. There is no doubt that the advances is pheromone technology has 
enabled the development very effective and accurate monitors, capable of 
detecting very small or new infestations. Blunder traps simply demonstrate how 
severe an infestation has become. For insects and even mice to be caught this 
way indicates severe infestations.  Not something of much use when you consider 
many museums following good IPM protocols regard one moth as a serious 
infestation!

 

I’m not ‘re-inventing the wheel’ but rather trying to develop something which 
may bring us into the 21st century. A trap with a number of pheromone lures 
which will attract insects even if there are very few around; at a fair and 
reasonable price.

I can well understand museums using ineffective blunder traps, particularly 
when we all have to control costs. What I am trying to develop and offer is 
something in a similar price range which actually works!

 

All the best

 

Colin 

From: bugma...@aol.com 

Sent: Tuesday, January 03, 2012 6:37 PM

To: pestlist@museumpests.net 

Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

This is a message from the Museumpests List.
To post to this list send it as an email to pestlist@museumpests.net
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---

Barbara -

 

As far as the museum community goes, flat, cardboard glueboards, manufactured 
by Atlantic Paste & Glue Co. of Brooklyn, NY or Bell Laboratories in Wisconsin 
and others are the best "multi-functional" insect traps on the market today.  
Even flying insects end up in these "blunder" traps.  Not only can you 
determine the kinds of insects getting caught (indoor or outdoor), you can 
often determine from which direction they're coming.  As an added bonus, mice 
can be caught on the larger ones.  And they're cheap!  Let's not reinvent the 
wheel.

 

Tom Parker



-Original Message-
From: Appelbaum & Himmelstein 
To: pestlist 
Sent: Tue, Jan 3, 2012 10:58 am
Subject: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

This is a message from the Museumpests List.
To post to this list send it as an email to pestlist@museumpests.net
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The ICOM members list on LinkedIn is having a discussion about the possibility 
of developing a multi-functional insect trap.  I suggested that they post on 
the pest list as well.  If they don't, those of you who are interested should 
go on to the LinkedIn site to put in your two cents. 

Barbara Appelbaum

 

This is the posting: Monitoring Dear all, I am considering the development of a 
multi functional insect trap / monitor which will trap the most common insects 
in one simple unit. Is there a need for something like this? 
<http://www.linkedin.com/e/-vwzbz4-gwyxkeid-39/vaq/86916113/1769357/63158651/view_disc/?hs=false&tok=1crFS8Vsfg7l41>
 

 

 

 





 


Error! Filename not specified.


 


Error! Filename not specified.


 


Error! Filename not specified.


 


Error! Filename not specified.


 


Error! Filename not specified.


 


Error! Filename not specified.


 


Error! Filename not specified.


 


Error! Filename not specified.





 


 


 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 





 

-- 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-03 Thread Anne_Ennes
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   Your   Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion   
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   at:01/03/2012 03:47:12 PM   
   






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Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-03 Thread bugman22
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---

Group -

I hope ICOM can come up with a "multi-purpose" insect trap.  However, if you 
consider the current cost of a box of Webbing Clothes Moth pheromone lures and 
traps (and that's only 1 insect species), I would think the cost of a trap with 
multiple lures or pheromones would be prohibitive.

By knowing the habits of various insects and mice, strategic placement of 
blunder traps are quite effective in preventing unwanted visitors from entering 
buildings.  The same can be said of those small infestations in collection 
areas.  The glue of certain blunder traps is highly attractive to webbing 
clothes moths (both sexes) without the use of pheromones.  And the traps can be 
hung right in the exhibit or clothing storage area; they don't necessarily need 
to be placed along the floorline.  

Trapping a mouse on a glueboard does not mean the place is overrun with mice.  
Most mice penetrate a building from the exterior.  Strategic trap placement 
really can have a dramatic effect on preventing mouse and outdoor insect 
ingress.  It's the age old story of "thinking like the critter."

Tom Parker



-Original Message-
From: colin smith 
To: pestlist 
Sent: Tue, Jan 3, 2012 2:25 pm
Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion


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Sorry Tom, I have to disagree. What you describe is what you say it is; A 
blunder trap. There is no doubt that the advances is pheromone technology has 
enabled the development very effective and accurate monitors, capable of 
detecting very small or new infestations. Blunder traps simply demonstrate how 
severe an infestation has become. For insects and even mice to be caught this 
way indicates severe infestations.  Not something of much use when you consider 
many museums following good IPM protocols regard one moth as a serious 
infestation!
 
I’m not ‘re-inventing the wheel’ but rather trying to develop something which 
may bring us into the 21st century. A trap with a number of pheromone lures 
which will attract insects even if there are very few around; at a fair and 
reasonable price.
I can well understand museums using ineffective blunder traps, particularly 
when we all have to control costs. What I am trying to develop and offer is 
something in a similar price range which actually works!
 
All the best
 
Colin 


From: bugma...@aol.com 
Sent: Tuesday, January 03, 2012 6:37 PM
To: pestlist@museumpests.net 
Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

This is a message from the Museumpests List.
To post to this list send it as an email to pestlist@museumpests.net
To unsubscribe please look at the footer of this email.
---

Barbara -
 
As far as the museum community goes, flat, cardboard glueboards, manufactured 
by Atlantic Paste & Glue Co. of Brooklyn, NY or Bell Laboratories in Wisconsin 
and others are the best "multi-functional" insect traps on the market today.  
Even flying insects end up in these "blunder" traps.  Not only can you 
determine the kinds of insects getting caught (indoor or outdoor), you can 
often determine from which direction they're coming.  As an added bonus, mice 
can be caught on the larger ones.  And they're cheap!  Let's not reinvent the 
wheel.
 
Tom Parker



-Original Message-
From: Appelbaum & Himmelstein 
To: pestlist 
Sent: Tue, Jan 3, 2012 10:58 am
Subject: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion


This is a message from the Museumpests List.
To post to this list send it as an email to pestlist@museumpests.net
To unsubscribe please look at the footer of this email.
---
The ICOM members list on LinkedIn is having a discussion about the possibility 
of developing a multi-functional insect trap.  I suggested that they post on 
the pest list as well.  If they don't, those of you who are interested should 
go on to the LinkedIn site to put in your two cents. 
Barbara Appelbaum

 
This is the posting: Monitoring Dear all, I am considering the development of a 
multi functional insect trap / monitor which will trap the most common insects 
in one simple unit. Is there a need for something like this?







 




































 







 







 







 







 







 







 







 










 





 





 




 








 








 















 

 

 

 





 

-- 

 

 


 


 


 

 






-

RE: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-03 Thread Mary Nicolett
This is a message from the Museumpests List.
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---
Colin-

I have no access to my LinkedIn account at the moment, but if you are looking 
at placing multi-pheromones in one trap, I would say that would not be of 
interest to very many museums.  Of course, I may be speaking out of line...  
From what I understand, there is debate on pheromone usage as to whether they 
will attract NEW insects into your building.  “Blunder” traps work by catching 
insects that are already there, and pheromones are generally used only when you 
know what insect exists within your building, in attempt to discover exactly 
where they are entering the “envelope.”

I hope that input helps.

And please, if I am wrong about the use of pheromones, do please let me know!

Sincerely,
Mary Nicolett

Mary Nicolett
Preparator, Logistics Facilitator
Dallas Museum of Art
mnicol...@dallasmuseumofart.org<mailto:mnicol...@dallasmuseumofart.org>
(214) 922-1288


From: ad...@museumpests.net [mailto:ad...@museumpests.net] On Behalf Of colin 
smith
Sent: Tuesday, January 03, 2012 1:09 PM
To: pestlist@museumpests.net
Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

This is a message from the Museumpests List.
To post to this list send it as an email to 
pestlist@museumpests.net<mailto:pestlist@museumpests.net>
To unsubscribe please look at the footer of this email.
---
Sorry Tom, I have to disagree. What you describe is what you say it is; A 
blunder trap. There is no doubt that the advances is pheromone technology has 
enabled the development very effective and accurate monitors, capable of 
detecting very small or new infestations. Blunder traps simply demonstrate how 
severe an infestation has become. For insects and even mice to be caught this 
way indicates severe infestations.  Not something of much use when you consider 
many museums following good IPM protocols regard one moth as a serious 
infestation!

I’m not ‘re-inventing the wheel’ but rather trying to develop something which 
may bring us into the 21st century. A trap with a number of pheromone lures 
which will attract insects even if there are very few around; at a fair and 
reasonable price.
I can well understand museums using ineffective blunder traps, particularly 
when we all have to control costs. What I am trying to develop and offer is 
something in a similar price range which actually works!

All the best

Colin
From: bugma...@aol.com<mailto:bugma...@aol.com>
Sent: Tuesday, January 03, 2012 6:37 PM
To: pestlist@museumpests.net<mailto:pestlist@museumpests.net>
Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion
This is a message from the Museumpests List.
To post to this list send it as an email to 
pestlist@museumpests.net<mailto:pestlist@museumpests.net>
To unsubscribe please look at the footer of this email.
---
Barbara -

As far as the museum community goes, flat, cardboard glueboards, manufactured 
by Atlantic Paste & Glue Co. of Brooklyn, NY or Bell Laboratories in Wisconsin 
and others are the best "multi-functional" insect traps on the market today.  
Even flying insects end up in these "blunder" traps.  Not only can you 
determine the kinds of insects getting caught (indoor or outdoor), you can 
often determine from which direction they're coming.  As an added bonus, mice 
can be caught on the larger ones.  And they're cheap!  Let's not reinvent the 
wheel.

Tom Parker

-Original Message-
From: Appelbaum & Himmelstein 
mailto:aa...@mindspring.com>>
To: pestlist mailto:pestlist@museumpests.net>>
Sent: Tue, Jan 3, 2012 10:58 am
Subject: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion
This is a message from the Museumpests List.
To post to this list send it as an email to 
pestlist@museumpests.net<mailto:pestlist@museumpests.net>
To unsubscribe please look at the footer of this email.
---
The ICOM members list on LinkedIn is having a discussion about the possibility 
of developing a multi-functional insect trap.  I suggested that they post on 
the pest list as well.  If they don't, those of you who are interested should 
go on to the LinkedIn site to put in your two cents.
Barbara Appelbaum

This is the posting: Monitoring Dear all, I am considering the development of a 
multi functional insect trap / monitor which will trap the most common insects 
in one simple unit. Is there a need for something like 
this?<http://www.linkedin.com/e/-vwzbz4-gwyxkeid-39/vaq/86916113/1769357/63158651/view_disc/?hs=false&tok=1crFS8Vsfg7l41>



















































--






---

Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-03 Thread colin smith
This is a message from the Museumpests List.
To post to this list send it as an email to pestlist@museumpests.net
To unsubscribe please look at the footer of this email.
---
Sorry Tom, I have to disagree. What you describe is what you say it is; A 
blunder trap. There is no doubt that the advances is pheromone technology 
has enabled the development very effective and accurate monitors, capable of 
detecting very small or new infestations. Blunder traps simply demonstrate 
how severe an infestation has become. For insects and even mice to be caught 
this way indicates severe infestations.  Not something of much use when you 
consider many museums following good IPM protocols regard one moth as a 
serious infestation!

I’m not ‘re-inventing the wheel’ but rather trying to develop something 
which may bring us into the 21st century. A trap with a number of pheromone 
lures which will attract insects even if there are very few around; at a 
fair and reasonable price.
I can well understand museums using ineffective blunder traps, particularly 
when we all have to control costs. What I am trying to develop and offer is 
something in a similar price range which actually works!

All the best

Colin

From: bugma...@aol.com
Sent: Tuesday, January 03, 2012 6:37 PM
To: pestlist@museumpests.net
Subject: Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion
This is a message from the Museumpests List.
To post to this list send it as an email to pestlist@museumpests.net
To unsubscribe please look at the footer of this email.
---

Barbara -

As far as the museum community goes, flat, cardboard glueboards, 
manufactured by Atlantic Paste & Glue Co. of Brooklyn, NY or Bell 
Laboratories in Wisconsin and others are the best "multi-functional" insect 
traps on the market today.  Even flying insects end up in these "blunder" 
traps.  Not only can you determine the kinds of insects getting caught 
(indoor or outdoor), you can often determine from which direction they're 
coming.  As an added bonus, mice can be caught on the larger ones.  And 
they're cheap!  Let's not reinvent the wheel.

Tom Parker



-Original Message-
From: Appelbaum & Himmelstein 
To: pestlist 
Sent: Tue, Jan 3, 2012 10:58 am
Subject: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion


This is a message from the Museumpests List.
To post to this list send it as an email to pestlist@museumpests.net
To unsubscribe please look at the footer of this email.
---
The ICOM members list on LinkedIn is having a discussion about the 
possibility of developing a multi-functional insect trap.  I suggested that 
they post on the pest list as well.  If they don't, those of you who are 
interested should go on to the LinkedIn site to put in your two cents.
Barbara Appelbaum


This is the posting: Monitoring Dear all, I am considering the development 
of a multi functional insect trap / monitor which will trap the most common 
insects in one simple unit. Is there a need for something like this?



























































  -- 






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Appelbaum & Himmelstein
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---

Re: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-03 Thread bugman22
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To post to this list send it as an email to pestlist@museumpests.net
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---

Barbara -

As far as the museum community goes, flat, cardboard glueboards, manufactured 
by Atlantic Paste & Glue Co. of Brooklyn, NY or Bell Laboratories in Wisconsin 
and others are the best "multi-functional" insect traps on the market today.  
Even flying insects end up in these "blunder" traps.  Not only can you 
determine the kinds of insects getting caught (indoor or outdoor), you can 
often determine from which direction they're coming.  As an added bonus, mice 
can be caught on the larger ones.  And they're cheap!  Let's not reinvent the 
wheel.

Tom Parker



-Original Message-
From: Appelbaum & Himmelstein 
To: pestlist 
Sent: Tue, Jan 3, 2012 10:58 am
Subject: [pestlist] LinkedIn discussion


This is a message from the Museumpests List.
To post to this list send it as an email to pestlist@museumpests.net
To unsubscribe please look at the footer of this email.
---
The ICOM members list on LinkedIn is having a discussion about the possibility 
of developing a multi-functional insect trap.  I suggested that they post on 
the pest list as well.  If they don't, those of you who are interested should 
go on to the LinkedIn site to put in your two cents.
Barbara Appelbaum



This is the posting: Monitoring Dear all, I am considering the development of a 
multi functional insect trap / monitor which will trap the most common insects 
in one simple unit. Is there a need for something like this?













































 







 







 







 







 







 







 







 










 





 





 




 








 








 















 

 

 

 





 

-- 

 

 


 


 


 

 






---
This email, and any attachments, may be confidential and also privileged. If 
you are not the intended recipient, please notify the sender and delete all 
copies of this transmission along with any attachments immediately. You should 
not copy or use it for any purpose, nor disclose its contents to any other 
person.
---


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Appelbaum & Himmelstein
444 Central Park West
New York, NY  10025
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212-316-1039 (fax)
aa...@mindspring.com

website: aandhconservation.org










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[pestlist] LinkedIn discussion

2012-01-03 Thread Appelbaum & Himmelstein
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---
The ICOM members list on LinkedIn is having a discussion about the possibility 
of developing a multi-functional insect trap.  I suggested that they post on 
the pest list as well.  If they don't, those of you who are interested should 
go on to the LinkedIn site to put in your two cents.
Barbara Appelbaum

This is the posting: Monitoring Dear all, I am considering the development of a 
multi functional insect trap / monitor which will trap the most common insects 
in one simple unit. Is there a need for something like this?


> 
> 
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> --
>  
>  
>  
>  
>  
>  
> ---
> This email, and any attachments, may be confidential and also privileged. If 
> you are not the intended recipient, please notify the sender and delete all 
> copies of this transmission along with any attachments immediately. You 
> should not copy or use it for any purpose, nor disclose its contents to any 
> other person.
> ---
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> --
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> 
> 
> --
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Appelbaum & Himmelstein
444 Central Park West
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212-666-4630 (voice)
212-316-1039 (fax)
aa...@mindspring.com
website: aandhconservation.org







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