Hi Dennis,
Is it really called a confusion of weasels? That is as good as a murder
of crows.
Good luck.
Rick

________________________________

From: pestlist-ow...@museumpests.net
[mailto:pestlist-ow...@museumpests.net] On Behalf Of Dennis Piechota
Sent: Thursday, October 07, 2010 6:28 AM
To: pestlist@museumpests.net
Subject: Re: [pestlist] Squirrels


Thanks Rick and Steve, 
I should have mentioned that our storage room is in the center of a
defunct parking garage. There is no food source for 40 meters or more
from the room. I think that's why the corrugated glue is appetizing,
perhaps only by the nesting baby squirrels. In our trapping and
observations we haven't seen any other rodents... yet.

The Tanglefoot and Shake-away both sound promising. I wonder if they've
ever been mixed together... what a nasty idea. In the meantime we've let
a confusion of weasels loose in storage (just kidding).

Dennis

Dennis Piechota
Conservator
Fiske Center for Archaeological Research
UMass Boston
Office: 617-287-6829



On Wed, Oct 6, 2010 at 4:18 PM, Steve Sullivan
<ssulli...@naturemuseum.org> wrote:


        If you have squirrels in your storage areas you have more issues
than just the squirrels.  If squirrels have access to an area, so do
nearly all other agents of deterioration, including other even more
damaging/dangerous vertebrates like bats, coons, cats, etc.  There are
more variables to consider when dealing with and predicting behavior of
vertebrates than with arthropods but squirrels should be easier to
exclude than arthropods from even the most basic of collections storage
areas.  Glue is certainly not a preferred food source and, though
cardboard is a good nesting material, these are not resoiurces they will
work too hard to obtain under most circumstances.  As with the previous
posts about hibernating insects, make sure all holes and access points
are patched and sealed.  With squirrels it may be necessary to cover an
area with sheet metal since, once they find a place they like to sit and
gnaw, they may return to a wooden patch and open it again.  Ammonia
soaked rags placed or tied in the area are irritating and usually
avoided.  Tanglefoot is annoying to them.  Repellents are a good
occasional control method but squirrels can habituate to them; use them
in conjunction with other control methods.  Monitor historic and
potential entry points rigorously and make them unpleasant places either
with the above methods, Christmas lights, monitors with squirt guns,
vegetation modification, kinetic sculptures, etc.

         

        Relocation is usually a bad idea from both pest control and
ecological perspectives.  The squirrels either return or die miserably
from fights, starvation, weather, or predation.  Trapping and euthanasia
is the most humane and effective course, just like we do with all other
museum pests.  Squirrel populations can tolerate up to 80% annual
mortality and still maintain long-term stability.   You can use live
traps and CO2, big snap traps, and other control methods similar to that
used for rats, though local regulations vary because squirrels are a
game animal.  Sometimes it seems that the population learns to shelter
in buildings from a few individuals so concerted trapping for a few
seasons eliminates the problem individuals and for sometime later there
aren't any problems.  

         

        Eliminating outside food and nesting areas for squirrels can be
difficult since these often come from legacy trees and their mast.
However, if squirrels are being fed near the building or are regularly
using garbage cans you can enact policies to manage this.

         

        Also, I would approach the "old lady who swallowed a fly" method
of eradication with care.  In most cases this has poor results, at least
for the introduced animal which usually dies a miserable death and, if
not, it will negatively affect more than just the intended target.  Feel
free to email or call if you want to talk about your specific situation
and discuss particular methods.

         

        In the meantime, I hope everyone will tell me about the
squirrels near them at ProjectSquirrel.org <http://projectsquirrel.org/>
.  

         

        --Steve

         

        Steven M. Sullivan  |  Curator of Urban Ecology 

        The Chicago Academy of Sciences and its Peggy Notebaert Nature
Museum 

         

        Museum  |  2430 North Cannon Drive  |  Chicago, Illinois 60614
|  naturemuseum.org <http://www.naturemuseum.org/> 

        Collections Facility  | 4001 North Ravenswood Ave.  |  Chicago,
Illinois 60613  |  ProjectSquirrel.org <http://projectsquirrel.org/> 

        708-937-6253  |  Fax 773-755-5199  |  ssulli...@naturemuseum.org


         

        The Urban Gateway To Nature And Science

         

         

         

        From: pestlist-ow...@museumpests.net
[mailto:pestlist-ow...@museumpests.net] On Behalf Of Dennis Piechota
        Sent: Wednesday, October 06, 2010 12:45 PM


        To: pestlist@museumpests.net
        Subject: [pestlist] Squirrels

        

         

        I hope this is the appropriate place to ask about larger
urchins.

         

        We have a storage area for archaeological materials (almost all
inorganics, typically ceramics, stone and iron) that keeps getting
attacked by squirrels. They like to eat the glue in our corrugated
boxes, thus destroying our provenience data. Then they will sometimes
nest in the boxes! Very disheartening. We keep trapping them and
plugging up their outside entry points. We prohibit all bonafide food
sources from storage and are now switching over to glueless twin-walled
polyethylene cartons with duplicate labelling. Still with all that I've
learned not to under-estimate these critters. Is there anything else we
can do?

         

        Dennis

        
        Dennis Piechota
        Conservator
        Fiske Center for Archaeological Research
        UMass Boston
        Office: 617-287-6829


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