And thank you for your reply. 

 

It is quite good to know that I am not the only one who has find herself / 
himself in that critical situation. 

 

Best wishes

Antje 

 

 

Antje Zygalski 

 

Conservation Scientist, specialised on Ancient Wooden Objects (M.A., Cologne 
Institute of Conservation Sciences-CICS)

Conservator of Wooden Objects and Furniture (state-certified three-year 
apprenticeship)

Carpenter / Joiner / Cabinetmaker (state-certified three-year apprenticeship)

 

a.zygal...@googlemail.com

0049 - 173 – 67 222 32

 <https://independent.academia.edu/AZygalski> 
https://independent.academia.edu/AZygalski

 

______________________________________________________________________________________________________

 

                                               interest of research: ancient 
Egyptian constructed wooden objects

 



______________________________________________________________________________________________________

 

Von: pestlist@googlegroups.com <pestlist@googlegroups.com> Im Auftrag von 
Angelica Isa-Adaniya
Gesendet: Dienstag, 3. August 2021 20:19
An: pestlist@googlegroups.com
Betreff: Re: [PestList] Just a private story of spreading C. longicaudata in 
Germany

 

Thank you for your story, Antje.

 

I have had a similar thing happen to me with Mexican book beetles. They are 
common at the museum and starting last year or so, I began finding them at home 
too. Except I have no idea how I brought them home, what they're eating or 
where they are hanging out since I have found them in random places including 
kitchen, living room, bathroom and bedroom. These insects are so good at 
travelling at our expense haha.

 

Best wishes from Peru,

Angelica

 

On Tue, 3 Aug 2021 at 12:51, 'Antje' via MuseumPests <pestlist@googlegroups.com 
<mailto:pestlist@googlegroups.com> > wrote:

Dear Pestlist-Members,

 

 

I thought I might share this experience …

The photograph added shows a huge specimen sitting on toilet-paper. And that 
roll of toilet-paper was standing in my private kitchen! 

(The toilet-paper was used due to the lack of regular kitchen-tissue-paper. The 
photograph was taken with an iPhone.)

 

Here is the story to “How it / they got there”:

 

 

2018, Hildesheim, Germany  

In 2018 I joined a project in a museum in Hildesheim, a town very central in 
Germany. 

While being there I was asked not just to work in the project itself but also 
to help with the regular tasks of the conservators. 

At the same time an exhibition was planned to open soon which consisted only of 
paper-based materials (prints, sketches, photographs …). Just before the 
opening the volunteering curator of this exhibition came to the conservators 
workshop asking for help as he has seen “strange creatures crumbling around”. 

I was asked to took over this task as I had dealt with pest management before 
and so we were checking the rooms where the temporary exhibition was installed. 

 

At the time we removed the first picture from the wall a huge infestation was 
obvious. 

(Later research has shown that there was a flooding in the basement several 
years ago and that within the cleaning of the affected rooms an infestation was 
already realised but it was not clear which areas of the building were 
infested, there was little known about that type of pest and the museums 
conservators had to deal with a lot of other things. As usual.)

 

What we have done for the time that I joined the project were two things:

1. Every two weeks on Monday (governmental museums in Germany are closed 
Mondays) we took of every single object from the walls and collected all 
specimens we could find. We could do that together 8 times before the 
exhibition run out and at the end we had collected about 240 alive specimens. 

2. We started with testing different materials and methods. And we figured out 
that the basic problem was the specimens were living / sitting behind the 
hanging objects and not coming down to the floor on their own. So the regular 
glue / blunder traps and diatomeen were not working. After that we have tried 
using glue traps with additional attractants (from drug stores and the S-trap 
from Pankow). This was working already better but the problem was where to 
place these traps in a running exhibition with nearly nothing standing around. 

I left the project and so the museum at the same time when the exhibition was 
finished and these rooms were used as a temporary storage within the movement 
of the whole objects storage. So the tests didn’t go on and I don’t know what 
the situation is now.

 

But when I left I packed my private stuff in cardboard-boxes from the museum to 
transport everything to my flat … 

(The boxes were old ones, having been used already several times in the museum 
and of cause have not been treated. They stayed for about two weeks in my 
museums-office – in a completely different architectural area that the 
investigated rooms – before I could go back and take them home. And I 
transported them with a rented car.) 

 

2019, Cologne, Germany 

When I repacked everything at my private home one specimen crawled out of one 
box. I caught it and hoped that has been the only one. 

 

2021, Cologne 

In the last two years it turned out that it wasn’t that way. 

I have already collected several specimens at my place – in the home office 
room, in the kitchen and in the bathroom. 

Till now they occurred very seldom so I have just collected them in the idea to 
give them to a colleague who is doing further research on treatments (a paper 
conservator).

But I have tracked three specimens in the last two days and I guess now it is 
time to place some traps with attractants … 

 

 

 

So far. 

Just a private story of spreading C. longicaudata from one building to another, 
in fact one city to another. 

 

 

 

Best wishes from Germany

Antje 

 

 

PS: If someone likes to have a specimen for a referencing pests collection I am 
willing to go on with active collecting – rather than passive collecting via 
traps – and send them wherever needed. 

But please note that I am just sending them as dead ones. I don’t want to 
spread them even further. 😊 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Antje Zygalski 

 

Conservation Scientist, specialised on Ancient Wooden Objects (M.A., Cologne 
Institute of Conservation Sciences-CICS)

Conservator of Wooden Objects and Furniture (state-certified three-year 
apprenticeship)

Carpenter / Joiner / Cabinetmaker (state-certified three-year apprenticeship)

 

a.zygal...@googlemail.com <mailto:a.zygal...@googlemail.com> 

0049 - 173 – 67 222 32

 <https://independent.academia.edu/AZygalski> 
https://independent.academia.edu/AZygalski

 

______________________________________________________________________________________________________

 

                                               interest of research: ancient 
Egyptian constructed wooden objects

 



______________________________________________________________________________________________________

 

 


 
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