Subject: Lighting for butterfly collection
I am forwarding the post with the original butterfly query to an entomologist who may know of specific research on butterfly fading that I don't. Basically, your approach is sound. You should be aware that there is more than one way butterfly wings show color. Pigmented scales on the wings will fade; scales with structural colors will not. If you have a large proportion of butterflies such as the blue Morphos, you need not take such extreme measures to prevent fading. Red and yellow-based tones are pigment colors, as are some blues and greens. You will also lose color if the scales are abraded or jostled away (I saw some damage to butterflies from Darwin's own collection displayed at Down House in a low case which was frequently bumped and leaned on). However, the whole insect itself will be vulnerable to embrittlement and disintegration over time if it is exposed to UV. The more of this you can cut out, the better. The type of lighting you describe should work for preservation of both color and specimen integrity. Good luck, Sally Shelton Director, Collections Care and Conservation President-Elect, Society for the Preservation of Natural History Collections San Diego Natural History Museum P.O. Box 1390 San Diego, California 92112 619-232-3821 Fax: 619-232-0248 *** Conservation DistList Instance 10:18 Distributed: Tuesday, August 13, 1996 Message Id: cdl-10-18-004 ***Received on Thursday, 8 August, 1996