Wings and dust and dead insects can actually be deposited through the
ventilation system.   Check for an overhead vent nearby.
Linda Roundhill

On Fri, Feb 22, 2019, 8:27 AM Louis Sorkin <sor...@amnh.org> wrote:

> Just to further explain:
>
> Gretchen Anderson: As for the dermestids (carpet beetles), the larva will
> be eating proteins – wool, hair, hide, horn, feather.  That kind of thing.
> You may have an old, long standing infestation. It is generally the larva
> that are causing the damage.
>
>    - Many people seem to overlook that dried up rodent (and other mammals
>    plus bird) corpses are excellent dermestid larval food sources. It’s not
>    restricted to fur and feathers. Rodent infestations produce naturally
>    occurring dead rodents, but rodent bait kills and misplaced snap trap and
>    multi-capture kills are other examples.  It’s not just *Dermestes*
>    species, well known for museum cleaning of skeletons, but other dermesid
>    species from other genera as well consume dried muscle and organs.  BTW,
>    some typical tenebrionid grain pests will consume animal matter, too.
>
>
>
> Louis N. Sorkin, B.C.E.
>
> Entomologist, Arachnologist, Myriapodologist
>
> Insect Cuisine & Entomophagy Research
>
> *[image: cid:image001.png@01D235DF.2C8D90E0]*
>
> Division of Invertebrate Zoology|American Museum of Natural History
>
> Central Park West at 79th Street|New York, New York 10024-5192
>
> sor...@amnh.org
>
> 212-769-5613 voice | 212-769-5277 fax | 917-953-0094 local pager
>
> http://www.amnh.org/our-research/staff-directory/louis-n.-sorkin
>
> [image: cid:image002.jpg@01D3782F.ECFAC5D0]
>
> The New York Entomological Society, Inc.
>
> www.nyentsoc.org
>
> n...@amnh.org
>
> [image: cid:image001.png@01D110A0.A110F570]
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> *From:* pestlist@googlegroups.com <pestlist@googlegroups.com> *On Behalf
> Of *Anderson, Gretchen
> *Sent:* Thursday, February 21, 2019 6:39 PM
> *To:* pestlist@googlegroups.com
> *Subject:* RE: [pestlist] Carpet beetle large area and termites
>
>
>
> Hi Adrienne,
>
>
> Joel’s suggestions are excellent.
>
>
>
> I agree, fumigation seems extreme. Termites are very difficult to control,
> and I am not an expert on them.  However, as I understand it, they live in
> large (sometimes very large) colonies and your buildings may be in the
> center of it.  So strategies on how to keep the termites away from the
> property are recommended.  You might explore (or suggest to the person who
> manages the gallery) the life cycle of termites and recommendations on the
> Museum Pest Network
> https://museumpests.net/identification/identification-pest-fact-sheets/
> <https://na01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fmuseumpests.net%2Fidentification%2Fidentification-pest-fact-sheets%2F&data=01%7C01%7Csorkin%40amnh.org%7C95d884974f6d458c90e808d69855bbaf%7Cbe0003e8c6b9496883aeb34586974b76%7C0&sdata=qXWUEJTO3X4J4MFCWD%2FaG%2BgIJjH0Vp42a5ACOOUtrVg%3D&reserved=0>.
> This will give you recommendations on how to proceed. The more you know
> about the specific pest the better you can determine how to control it.
> Termites swarm at a specific time of the year – otherwise you tend not to
> see them at all. That is when you will find the wings.
>
>
>
> As for the dermestids (carpet beetles), the larva will be eating proteins
> – wool, hair, hide, horn, feather.  That kind of thing. You may have an
> old, long standing infestation. It is generally the larva that are causing
> the damage. Objects should be frozen (follow the recommendations on Museum
> Pest Network) and all frass removed.  Housekeeping of the surrounding areas
> must be thoroughly kept up with.  Use blunder/sticky traps to monitor for
> ongoing activity.  This is the best way to keep up on it. Unfortunately
> there is no magic bullet.
>
>
>
> Gretchen Anderson
>
>
>
> [image: id:image001.png@01D2D3A7.88A416E0]
>
> Gretchen Anderson
>
> Conservator
>
> Carnegie Museum of Natural History
>
> 5800 Baum Blvd.
>
> Pittsburgh PA 15206
>
> Phone: 412-665-2607
>
> Cell: 412-420-9083
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> *From:* pestlist@googlegroups.com <pestlist@googlegroups.com> *On Behalf
> Of *Voron, Joel
> *Sent:* Thursday, February 21, 2019 6:19 PM
> *To:* pestlist@googlegroups.com
> *Subject:* Re: [pestlist] Carpet beetle large area and termites
>
>
>
> Fumigation for termites seems pretty extreme to me. I would recommend a
> termidor liquid barrier at least in the area were you may see
> reoccurrence...that is if they are subterranean termites. A liquid
> foundation barrier would provide residual for many years to come....at
> least in that area. It would be best to rod trench and treat around the
> entire foundation if they are subterranean termites. If you can schedule
> cleaning/vacuuming of the high risk objects around the time the carpet
> beetle larvae are visible with loops that will catch them before they do
> any real damage. You will probably need to set out pheromone traps to see
> if you can pinpoint where the hotspot/epicenter of the carpet beetles are
> coming from in order to find the source. Insects limited can help you with
> a pheromone game plan. This sounds like you have a challenge on your hands.
> . JTV
>
>
>
>
>
> *Joel Voron   Colonial Williamsburg Foundation*
>
>   Conservation Dept.
>
>      Integrated Pest Management
>
>       Office 757-220-7080
>
>         Cell 757-634-1175
>
>           E-Mail jvo...@cwf.org
>
>
>
>
>
> [image:
> x-apple-ql-id://6ACD10AA-D3D1-43D2-A574-B632CDC743FB/x-apple-ql-magic/8AC15B9D-84CD-45A1-92DB-3B6E7CFAE332.jpg]
>
>
> On Feb 21, 2019, at 5:02 PM, Adrienne Dastgir <
> adrienne.dast...@chickasaw.net> wrote:
>
> Joel,
>
>
>
> I am sorry for the late responses but I have been out of the office all
> week.
>
> I do not work in the exhibit hall so it is hard for me to tell if the
> wings are from termites or from ants.  I work in another building where all
> the collections are housed.  I do not check any of their traps.   I know
> they only have an exterminator that comes by about once a month, far as
> traps they do not have any that I know about. I not sure what he does but
> when checks the exhibit hall. In the building that I work in the
> exterminator sprays the outside of the building and the area where the
> offices area, he is not allowed to spray in the lab, and in the collection
> areas.  I always inform him about pest I fine that might be a threat.  I am
> not sure if any of the exhibit hall workers have found anything but wings.
>
> The area is away from a windows, and low light.  The exhibit hall Manger
> said that he thought that was where the larger number of termites were at
> before they fumigated.  That they had to take down part of a large
> display that is on one side where they are seeing the wings.   The Manger
> thanks it could be from an old infestation but I do not see how when they
> vacuum and clean few hours later they see dust and wings again.
>
> I am not sure what type of termites  they fumigated for, and I am not sure
> what they used. I do know that they had to keep the exhibit hall closed for
> 48 hours when they did fumigated, the exterminator told me that there was
> all kinds of pest that were killed not just the termites.   I am not sure
> how fast they cleaned up all the other pest that were killed.
>
> The concern with opening the one display case up was that the beetles were
> alive and may fly out into the other areas, but if you do not open it up
> than the beetles may eat all the items that are in the case.   The other
> display area there is no way to open it up that I could see, guess a drill
> and borescope.  I am guessing this can get into cost.
>
>  I am also not sure how clean they are getting everything.
>
> I am currently the only one campus that knows about museum pest.  All I
> know  I learned when I started in 2017.
>
>
>
> Thanks, for the help
>
> Adrienne Dastgir
>
>
>
> *From:* pestlist@googlegroups.com [mailto:pestlist@googlegroups.com
> <pestlist@googlegroups.com>] *On Behalf Of *Voron, Joel
> *Sent:* Monday, February 18, 2019 5:03 PM
> *To:* pestlist@googlegroups.com
> *Subject:* Re: [pestlist] Carpet beetle large area and termites
>
>
>
> The wings may be from ants and not termites?
>
>  Are the wings being discovered in a readily observed space or could they
> be from an old infestation and just being uncovered now?
>
> If near a window the wings are probably fresh.
>
> I can't imagine termites having enough meat on them for carpet beetles to
> take hold. I was under the impression that they would desiccate rather
> quickly.
>
> What type of fumigant has been used and for what type of termite?
>
> If your cases with the carpet beetle problems are built ins and sealed you
> need to see if someone can get a kick plate off or find a place where you
> can drill and send a borascope in to have a look under them.
>
>
>
> There is a possibility that there is enough old dust hair and skin under
> there cases or the floor for that matter where the carpet beetles have set
> up shop.
>
> May be two completely separate issues going on as a coincidence.JTV
>
>
>
>
>
> *Joel Voron   Colonial Williamsburg Foundation*
>
>   Conservation Dept.
>
>      Integrated Pest Management
>
>       Office 757-220-7080
>
>         Cell 757-634-1175
>
>           E-Mail jvo...@cwf.org
>
>
>
>
>
> [image:
> x-apple-ql-id://6ACD10AA-D3D1-43D2-A574-B632CDC743FB/x-apple-ql-magic/8AC15B9D-84CD-45A1-92DB-3B6E7CFAE332.jpg]
>
>
> On Feb 18, 2019, at 4:25 PM, Alex Roach <
> alexro...@modifiedatmospheres.com.au> wrote:
>
> Hi Adrienne
>
>
>
> You are right that the insect bodies are left in treated items, and they
> can be a food source/attractant for dermestids.
>
>
>
> The wings may be alate wings. Reproductive termites have two pairs of
> wings that they shed following colonising flights.
>
>
>
> Do you know what sort of termites were in the building? What treatment was
> carried out?
>
>
>
> Best wishes
>
> Alex
>
>
>
> Alex Roach
>
> *Director*
>
> Modified Atmospheres
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On Mon, 18 Feb 2019 at 09:52, Adrienne Dastgir <
> adrienne.dast...@chickasaw.net> wrote:
>
> Hi All
>
>
>
> I have questions about carpet beetle. I know they are very damaging to
> collection they can destroy a textile collect in a few days if there is an
> infestation. They can go unnoticed for long time because of their sizes.
> Here is the issue about six month ago our main exhibit hall had termites.
> Which has been an ongoing battle for over year now.  I am not 100% sure
> because of how many times fumigated has happened before I started here. I
> know that they have fumigated at least three times since 2017. The last
> time being about six months ago.  Which the workers in the exhibit hall
> thought that there were no more termites.  I thank the Manger said that his
> staff began to fine wings about two-three months ago, and what they thought
> was termites.  The pest guy kept telling him that they were nothing that no
> way there could still be termites and that pest that they were fining would
> not harm the items on display.
>
>  I was asked by my Manger to go take a look at what they were fining to
> see if it was more termites.  However, it was not termites it was larvae of
> an Dermistidae (Carpet beetle).  In addition to this they are still finding
> termite wings.  Which makes me think that they may still have termites.   I
> had saw an email from pest list when someone had asked if dead pest
> attracts  dermestid beetles, the answer was no but they do not help.    The
> termites were of course in the walls and under display areas that were made
> of wood, and other areas.  These areas they were unable to remove any dead
> termites, so any termites that were dead that were in the walls, under
> displays that were unable to move were left.   An exhibit hall worker found
> three alive dermestid beetle larvae this morning and this afternoon they
> found five adult beetles all dead.
>
> Here are my questions:
>
> 1.       Could the beetles be feeding on the dead termites and causing
> the wings to be present?
>
> 2.       Is it possible that the termites are still there and that the
> fumigation did not work and the beetles are still feeding on some of the
> dead termites?
>
> 3.       If the dermestid beetles are in the wall feeding on something
> how are we going to eliminate them?  The area where the beetles are being
> found at the display does not move it is attached to the wall and it is
> wood with textiles display on top.  It only has a piece of lather and
> feather that can be removed and CO2 or frozen.  I real do not see what
> they could be fed on.  Other than something behind the display and wall.
>   However, there are other areas in the exhibit hall that are textiles that
> are at risk, large animal skins, cases of feather, leather clothes, and
> fur.
>
> 4.       Has anyone fumigate and been successful in killing them?  If you
> do fumigate does it leave dead bodies in walls which could cause an another
> infestation.
>
> I have found dermestid in other areas on our campus.  In the Archives
> building the area was much smaller and easier to clean.  We were able to
> freeze and CO2  everything.
>
>
>
> Any suggestions would be help.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Adrienne Dastgir
>
> Curator of Collections
>
> Chickasaw Culture Center
>
> Sulphur Oklahoma
>
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