I must retract my statement of skepticism about webbing clothes moth pheromone 
disruptors earlier in this thread. There is a product available in the UK but 
not the US. Oh how I wish we had it! Many thanks to my colleagues for the 
correction.

Adam

From: pestlist@googlegroups.com <pestlist@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of 
kilian.anheu...@ville-ge.ch
Sent: Thursday, February 18, 2021 3:42 AM
To: pestlist@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [PestList] Trichogramma Wasps

Hello,

We had a large scale trial with Trichogramma evanescens wasps against a Tineola 
bisselliella infestation in our reserves in 2009-10 which was a costly failure. 
Not only were the wasps inefficient because of their very limited range of 
action (they are tiny and do not fly) but we were also left with the cleaning 
issue afterwards.This was not a small matter because the specialized contractor 
applied them directly on to our collections of fur and feathers among other 
things. They are biologists, not conservators, and the necessary cleaning was 
just not something that they had thought of or had to deal with. Imagine the 
wasps as a grey dust, very time consuming if not impossible to remove from 
delicate textiles, fur, feathers etc. The dead wasps (we deployed a total of 
more than 3 million wasps in two years) do not magically disappear, they are 
still there on all delicate objects in our African collection. Think twice if 
this is really what you want to do to your collection.
It was suggested to us afterwards that the inefficiency of the wasps against 
the moths may have been due to a low level presence of insecticides (not enough 
to keep the moths at bay, though). Like in most other ethnographic and natural 
history collections, my predecessors in our institution used various chemicals 
to protect the objects. When I started here 10 years ago I found an empty 
bottle of DDT solution on a storage shelf. This may or may not have had an 
effect on the wasps but you may want to keep it in mind if your objects have 
also been treated at some point in the past.
Our experiences have been published in Studies in Conservation 58 (2013). Even 
though the paper is in French there are images which speak for themselves and I 
have also got an unpublished english version available on request.

Best regards,

Kilian Anheuser
Curator for preventive conservation
MEG - Musée d'ethnographie de Genève, Switzerland

[cid:image001.gif@01D70600.08CEB490]J. Dubuffet, Ontogénèse (détail) ©2020, 
ProLitteris, Zurich
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- - - - - - - - - - - - -
Kilian Anheuser
Conservation-restauration
Conservateur, chargé de la conservation
préventive des collections
T. +41 22 418 45 92 (direct)
kilian.anheu...@ville-ge.ch<mailto:kilian.anheu...@ville-ge.ch>

Musée d'ethnographie de Genève
Boulevard Carl-Vogt 67
CH - 1205 Genève
http://www.meg-geneve.ch<http://www.meg-geneve.ch/>
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Notre environnement est fragile, merci de n'imprimer ce mail qu'en cas de 
nécessité.





De :        "Michael Rebman" <mpr...@gmail.com<mailto:mpr...@gmail.com>>
A :        pestlist@googlegroups.com<mailto:pestlist@googlegroups.com>
Date :        17.02.2021 22:29
Objet :        Re: [PestList] Trichogramma Wasps
Envoyé par :        pestlist@googlegroups.com<mailto:pestlist@googlegroups.com>
________________________________



Greetings,

With both methods, what would leave less biological waste behind (since death 
moths are food sources for living pests)?  And would the Trichogramma wasps die 
off after the target pest is eliminated, or could they find another food source 
and create their own infestation?

Thank you,

Michael R.


On Wed, Feb 17, 2021 at 2:04 PM Adam Osgood 
<aosg...@historicnewengland.org<mailto:aosg...@historicnewengland.org>> wrote:
I’ve heard of that species of parasitoid being used against webbing cloths 
moths and look forward to hearing about results. I am skeptical however of the 
other strategy they mention in using pheromone as an effective means of 
interrupting reproduction by confusing the males.

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