RE: [pestlist] RE: Order Psocoptera

2013-07-04 Thread dina m . m
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Also Booklice (Psocoptera) are a pest for historic papers, books and 
manufactures because they feed on the starchy material (glue) in the book 
binders . that was recorded on the ancient Egyptian artifacts .  

 
From: laura.cas...@abdn.ac.uk
To: pestlist@museumpests.net
Subject: RE: [pestlist] RE: Order Psocoptera
Date: Wed, 3 Jul 2013 10:30:17 +

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Hi Tony,
 
Thanks for all the information. I shall have a read through these, it is good 
to know exactly how much damage they could cause, I’m still trying
 to understand what others in the IPM world count as a ‘jump’ in population? I 
am more than likely being over cautious as the increase is only in a couple of 
traps, and in single figures. All our stores are environmentally controlled and 
monitored and we are
 happy with RH and temp levels, I only use a nilfisk hoover with filters when 
housekeeping.
Maybe it is because it rains so much here!
Best wishes,
 
Laura
 
From: ad...@museumpests.net [mailto:ad...@museumpests.net]
On Behalf Of Tony Irwin

Sent: 02 July 2013 22:27

To: pestlist@museumpests.net

Subject: Re: [pestlist] RE: Order Psocoptera
 
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Laura - 

The standard work on British Booklice is New's Royal Entomological Society 
Handbook (2005). You can find a reference to it and other literature (most of 
which deals with free-living, rather than domestic species) at


http://www.brc.ac.uk/schemes/barkfly/literature.htm

Liposcelis can certainly do damage in a collection, feeding on insect 
specimens, for example. They will attack a variety of materials as well as 
mould. Starchy products are very attractive, so anything in the archives
 with starch-based glue will be fair game for them. Generally, the amount of 
damage is normally small, and associated mould growth is more likely to cause 
long-term problems. If you can achieve relatively low humidity in the archive 
stores, this will help.

Also note that increasing housekeeping could make the problem worse if it 
involves damp cloths rather than vacuum cleaners.


Tony












Dr A.G.Irwin

47 The Avenues

Norwich

Norfolk NR2 3PH

England

mobile: +44(0)7880707834

phone: +44(0)1603 453524


 

On 2 July 2013 14:27, Castle, Laura laura.cas...@abdn.ac.uk wrote:

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Dear Gretchen,
 
Thank you so much for your information.
Our RH is closely monitored by a BMS and local tiny tag systems, and has been 
staying within range.

The housekeeping is done every few months, so I might just increase it for the 
moment and monitor, as it is only a very small increase
 in population.
Best wishes,
 
Laura

 
From:
ad...@museumpests.net [mailto:ad...@museumpests.net]
On Behalf Of Anderson, Gretchen

Sent: 02 July 2013 12:43

To: pestlist@museumpests.net

Subject: [pestlist] RE: Order Psocoptera


 
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Psocoptera are generally considered a pest.  They feed on microscopic mold 
which indicates that the relative humidity is too high.  From personal 
experience
 I experienced a huge increase in population just prior to a mold out break.  
At the very least they are an environmental indicator.



The good news is that they can be easily controlled through improved 
housekeeping and reduced RH.



Good luck.

Gretchen Anderson

Conservator 

Carnegie Museum of Natural History.





From:
ad...@museumpests.net [ad...@museumpests.net] on behalf of Castle, Laura 
[laura.cas...@abdn.ac.uk]

Sent: Tuesday, July 02, 2013 7:19 AM

To: pestlist@museumpests.net

Subject: [pestlist] Order Psocoptera


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Dear all,
 
I was wondering if anyone could give me their opinion on the Order Psocoptera.
As far as I can tell we have a number of different

[pestlist] RE: Order Psocoptera

2013-07-02 Thread Castle, Laura
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Dear Gretchen,

Thank you so much for your information.
Our RH is closely monitored by a BMS and local tiny tag systems, and has been 
staying within range.
The housekeeping is done every few months, so I might just increase it for the 
moment and monitor, as it is only a very small increase in population.
Best wishes,

Laura

From: ad...@museumpests.net [mailto:ad...@museumpests.net] On Behalf Of 
Anderson, Gretchen
Sent: 02 July 2013 12:43
To: pestlist@museumpests.net
Subject: [pestlist] RE: Order Psocoptera

This is a message from the Museumpests List.
To post to this list send it as an email to 
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Psocoptera are generally considered a pest.  They feed on microscopic mold 
which indicates that the relative humidity is too high.  From personal 
experience I experienced a huge increase in population just prior to a mold out 
break.  At the very least they are an environmental indicator.

The good news is that they can be easily controlled through improved 
housekeeping and reduced RH.

Good luck.
Gretchen Anderson
Conservator
Carnegie Museum of Natural History.

From: ad...@museumpests.netmailto:ad...@museumpests.net 
[ad...@museumpests.net] on behalf of Castle, Laura [laura.cas...@abdn.ac.uk]
Sent: Tuesday, July 02, 2013 7:19 AM
To: pestlist@museumpests.netmailto:pestlist@museumpests.net
Subject: [pestlist] Order Psocoptera
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Dear all,

I was wondering if anyone could give me their opinion on the Order Psocoptera.
As far as I can tell we have a number of different types, such as 
Dorypteryx-domestica, Liposcelis-bostrychophila, Ectopsocus Briggsi and 
Psyllipsocus Ramburii.
What I would like your thoughts on is - are all/any classed as a danger to 
archive material (books, textiles, photographs)?

I use a number of different sources (online and books where possible), but if 
anyone knows of specific books that are handy for identification this would 
also be great!

Kind regards and thanks,

Laura Castle



Laura Castle
Collections Care Assistant, Glucksman Conservation Centre,
Library, Special Collections  Museums, University of Aberdeen, Bedford Road, 
Aberdeen AB24 3AA
t (office): +44 (0)1224 274268; t (studio): +44 (0)1224 273867
e: laura.cas...@abdn.ac.ukmailto:laura.cas...@abdn.ac.uk w: 
http://www.abdn.ac.uk/library/about/special/






The University of Aberdeen is a charity registered in Scotland, No SC013683.
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Re: [pestlist] RE: Order Psocoptera

2013-07-02 Thread Tony Irwin
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Laura -
The standard work on British Booklice is New's Royal Entomological Society
Handbook (2005). You can find a reference to it and other literature (most
of which deals with free-living, rather than domestic species) at
http://www.brc.ac.uk/schemes/barkfly/literature.htm
Liposcelis can certainly do damage in a collection, feeding on insect
specimens, for example. They will attack a variety of materials as well as
mould. Starchy products are very attractive, so anything in the archives
with starch-based glue will be fair game for them. Generally, the amount of
damage is normally small, and associated mould growth is more likely to
cause long-term problems. If you can achieve relatively low humidity in the
archive stores, this will help.
Also note that increasing housekeeping could make the problem worse if it
involves damp cloths rather than vacuum cleaners.
Tony

Dr A.G.Irwin
47 The Avenues
Norwich
Norfolk NR2 3PH
England

mobile: +44(0)7880707834
phone: +44(0)1603 453524


On 2 July 2013 14:27, Castle, Laura laura.cas...@abdn.ac.uk wrote:

 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.
 ---

 Dear Gretchen,



 Thank you so much for your information.

 Our RH is closely monitored by a BMS and local tiny tag systems, and has
 been staying within range.

 The housekeeping is done every few months, so I might just increase it for
 the moment and monitor, as it is only a very small increase in population.

 Best wishes,



 Laura



 *From:* ad...@museumpests.net [mailto:ad...@museumpests.net] *On Behalf
 Of *Anderson, Gretchen
 *Sent:* 02 July 2013 12:43
 *To:* pestlist@museumpests.net
 *Subject:* [pestlist] RE: Order Psocoptera



 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.
 ---

 Psocoptera are generally considered a pest.  They feed on microscopic mold
 which indicates that the relative humidity is too high.  From personal
 experience I experienced a huge increase in population just prior to a mold
 out break.  At the very least they are an environmental indicator.

 The good news is that they can be easily controlled through improved
 housekeeping and reduced RH.

 Good luck.
 Gretchen Anderson
 Conservator
 Carnegie Museum of Natural History.
  --

 *From:* ad...@museumpests.net [ad...@museumpests.net] on behalf of
 Castle, Laura [laura.cas...@abdn.ac.uk]
 *Sent:* Tuesday, July 02, 2013 7:19 AM
 *To:* pestlist@museumpests.net
 *Subject:* [pestlist] Order Psocoptera

 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.
 ---

 Dear all,



 I was wondering if anyone could give me their opinion on the Order
 Psocoptera.

 As far as I can tell we have a number of different types, such as
 Dorypteryx-domestica, Liposcelis-bostrychophila, Ectopsocus Briggsi and
 Psyllipsocus Ramburii.

 What I would like your thoughts on is – are all/any classed as a danger to
 archive material (books, textiles, photographs)?



 I use a number of different sources (online and books where possible), but
 if anyone knows of specific books that are handy for identification this
 would also be great!



 Kind regards and thanks,



 Laura Castle







 Laura Castle

 *Collections Care Assistant*, Glucksman Conservation Centre,

 Library, Special Collections  Museums, University of Aberdeen, Bedford
 Road, Aberdeen AB24 3AA
 t (*office*): +44 (0)1224 274268; t (*studio*): +44 (0)1224 273867

 e: laura.cas...@abdn.ac.uk w: *
 http://www.abdn.ac.uk/library/about/special/*









 The University of Aberdeen is a charity registered in Scotland, No
 SC013683.
 --
 To send an email to the list, send your msg to pestlist@museumpests.Net

 To unsubscribe from this list send an email to pestlist@museumpests.netand in 
 the subject put:
 unsubscribe - no quotes please.

 You are receiving the Pestlist emails in standard mode.
 To change to the DIGEST mode send an
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 Any problems email l...@collectionpests.com or l...@zaks.com


 The information contained in this message and/or attachments is intended
 only for the person or entity to which it is addressed and may contain
 confidential