You need to keep track of where you have found the casings or any other
probable insect damage or evidence of pest activity (write it all down).



Collect some of the casings in small plastic or glass vials for later
identification (if necessary).



Get some sticky traps (the kind that have a flat bottom) and put them
everywhere you have found evidence of pests.  Label all the traps with
location and date, and make a list of where you have put them.  Also put
traps near doorways, windows, and any openings in walls (e.g., pipe chases).
Place a few around the areas where you found the casings in corners and
along walls.  Search where you found the casings for other evidence of
ongoing pest activity (powder, dust, holes in objects).



Once your monitoring program is underway, then you can worry about isolation
and treatment of objects.  If you suspect that any objects have an active
infestation, try to isolate them.  For smaller objects, this can best be
done by enclosing them in polyethylene bags.  Once you have things isolated,
then you can worry about treatment options, which may include anoxia,
freezing, cleaning, or chemicals.  But before you start treating anything,
you need to find out what the pests are.



I recommend you read two chapters in "Storage of Natural History
Collections:  A Preventive Conservation Approach" (Rose, Hawks, and
Genoways)-the one on Pest Management by Wendy Jessup, and the Pest
Monitoring Study by Jeremy Jacobs.  Both provide good, solid information for
pest control in any type of museum.  The book is available from University
Products (www.universityproducts.com <http://www.universityproducts.com/> ).



Good luck,

John



John E. Simmons

Collection Manager, Natural History Museum

and

Coordinator, Museum Studies Program

University of Kansas

Dyche Hall

1345 Jayhawk Boulevard

Lawrence, Kansas 66045-7561

Telephone 785-864-4508

FAX 785-864-5335

[log in to unmask] <mailto:[log in to unmask]>

www.ku.edu/~museumst/









-----Original Message-----
From: Registrar - Danish Immigrant Museum [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
Sent: Friday, May 30, 2003 10:00 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: bug casings.



Ok all, I have a serious problem and need some advice.



 I have just recently started working at my museum. The building has been
open since '94. and I just discovered what I believe to be carpet beetle
casings on numerous objects in the permanent cases and in our period sitting
room. Obviously this is BAD but now what do I do. I have only found casings
no live bugs. To make matters more difficult I don't think the cases have
been opened or the sitting room cleaned and inspected since close to the
beginning of the permanent exhibit being set up. (Like many museums we
started with volunteer staff and are slowly moving to professionals. I am
only the second person with museum training to be hired.) So I don't know
how old of casings I am looking at, nor do I have a place to isolate or
freeze these items. The best I can do is put the smaller items in an anoxic
microenvironment. I am in the process of having the casings removed and the
pieces vacuumed. Then I plan to monitor to see if more casings appear.
However I am open to any suggestions as to how to proceed.



Thanks in advance



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