Dear Dr. John,
Thank you for the mail. I have seen some advertisements about yellow lights. 
Still we have not used them. 

Regards.

Dr. Abdul Rauf
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: John E Simmons 
  To: pestlist@museumpests.net 
  Sent: Wednesday, February 09, 2011 8:29 AM
  Subject: Re: [pestlist] About Lizards


  Dr. Rauf,
  Yellow lights seem to attract less insects that white lights, but I am not 
aware of any lights that do not attract insects at all.

  --John


  On Sat, Feb 5, 2011 at 2:00 AM, Dr. Abdul Rauf <abdul.r...@krepl.in> wrote:

    Dear Dr. John,

    Your writeup is really helpful for me. I shall try to place the lights 
little away from wall,  not directly attaching. Still the insects will come as 
the surrounding areas have vegetation and gardens.  Are there any spcial type 
of Lights that do not attract insects?  In India people are treating Lizards as 
a pest.  

    Hope to receive your reply.

    Dr. Abdul Rauf
    Truly Pest Solution Pvt. Ltd.
    (Truly Nolen International USA)
    1113 Hemkunt Tower, 98 Nehru Place
    New Delhi, India
    +91 9717017223
    abdul.r...@krepl.in
      ----- Original Message ----- 
      From: John E Simmons 
      To: pestlist@museumpests.net 
      Sent: Friday, February 04, 2011 10:07 PM
      Subject: Re: [pestlist] removing sticky traps from a silk object


      Dr Rauf,
      There are no chemicals that repel lizards that are safe to use in 
collections (or around humans, for that matter).  The lizards are on the walls 
because they are eating the insects they find on the walls so rather than 
trying to get rid of the lizards, you should focus on getting rid of their food 
supply.  If the lizards have no insects to feed on, they will move somewhere 
else.  

      On the positive side, the lizards are probably eating some collection 
pests; on the negative side, the lizard fecal matter and shed skin may attract 
more pests.  

      Often lizards are found on walls because lights on the walls attract 
insects (I have seen this often in Thailand).  If you can reposition lights so 
that they are not attached to the walls it will reduce the amount of insects on 
the walls and thus make them less attractive for the lizards.  Place the lights 
so that they are not attached to the wall, but shine on the wall--this way, the 
insects will be attracted to the light source rather than the wall surface.

      If it is necessary to remove the lizards from the walls, you can use flat 
sticky traps to catch the lizards by attaching the traps to the walls where the 
lizards crawl.  The lizards can either be humanely euthanized when they are 
caught in the traps, or removed from the sticky traps by using vegetable oil.  
However, unless you can seal the building and/or eliminate the insects the 
lizards are feeding on, they will return.

      --John

      John E. Simmons
      Museologica
      128 E. Burnside Street
      Bellefonte, Pennsylvania 16823-2010
      simmons.jo...@gmail.com
      303-681-5708
      www.museologica.com
      and
      Adjunct Curator of Collections
      Earth and Mineral Science Museum & Art Gallery
      Penn State University
      University Park, Pennsylvania 


      On Fri, Feb 4, 2011 at 9:42 AM, Dr. Abdul Rauf <abdul.r...@krepl.in> 
wrote:

        Dear Pestlist:
        How to drive away the lizards from the old buildings? Sometime they are 
moving high on the walls. Please give some ideas.
        Regards.

        Dr. Abdul Rauf
        Truly Pest Solution Pvt. Ltd.
        (Truly Nolen International USA)
        1113 Hemkunt Tower, 98 Nehru Place
        New Delhi
        abdul.r...@krepl.in
          ----- Original Message ----- 
          From: Silence, Patricia 
          To: pestlist@museumpests.net 
          Sent: Thursday, February 03, 2011 11:35 PM
          Subject: RE: [pestlist] removing sticky traps from a silk object


          Rose, 

          Our pest guy removes little lizards (live) from the traps using 
vegetable oil…not so good for silk, but maybe a starting point.

          Patty



          From: pestlist-ow...@museumpests.net 
[mailto:pestlist-ow...@museumpests.net] On Behalf Of Rose Daly
          Sent: Thursday, February 03, 2011 12:49 PM
          To: pestlist@museumpests.net
          Subject: [pestlist] removing sticky traps from a silk object



          Dear Pestlist:
           
          A mishap in de-installation opened and attached the adhesive of a 
Victor roach trap to a silk book cover.  I know from personal experience that 
this adhesive is quite sticky and difficult to remove from anything.  Does 
anyone has experience removing a sticky trap from a textile?  If it was silk 
that is great but other textiles would be enlightening as well. I will be 
performing mock-ups and I can share the information with everyone on the 
website if you are interested. 
           
          Thanks,
          Rose   

          Rose Daly
          Graduate Fellow
          Winterthur/University of Delaware Program in Art Conservation 
          rose_d...@hotmail.com








      -- 





  -- 
  John E. Simmons
  Museologica
  128 E. Burnside Street
  Bellefonte, Pennsylvania 16823-2010
  simmons.jo...@gmail.com
  303-681-5708
  www.museologica.com
  and
  Adjunct Curator of Collections
  Earth and Mineral Science Museum & Art Gallery
  Penn State University
  University Park, Pennsylvania 

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