Subject: Red spider mites
Mark Aronson <mark.aronson [at] yale__edu> writes >We have a situation in our ancient art gallery involving an annual >summer invasion of red spider mites. Do you have an Integrated Pest Management program in the gallery and the building in which it is housed? If the answer is "no", then one is needed. Contact a state-licensed pest control operator (PCO) for information. If the company doesn't know what IPM is, hang up and keep calling firms until you find one that does. The term "red spider mite" is not listed in any of the pest control references that I have, so you might want to find a non-smushed one and get it identified. That's always the first step to control- know the critter. Mites are in the class of Arachnida (spiders) and are sub-grouped with ticks as Acarina. They also have eight legs and are usually less than 5 mm in length. Mites, chiggers and ticks usually stay in foliage or ground cover, so that might not be what you have. It sounds to me that some sort of baiting method along with a structural repair approach might be what is needed here. Once you know what they are, what their life-cycle and food sources are, and where they are coming from, then you can design an effective control program. Good luck, Paul S. Storch Senior Objects Conservator/Section Head/Internal Unit Preparation Specialist Daniels Objects Conservation Laboratory (DOCL) B-109.1, Minnesota History Center 345 Kellogg Blvd. West St. Paul, MN 55102-1906 651-297-5774 Fax: 651-297-2967 *** Conservation DistList Instance 16:1 Distributed: Friday, June 14, 2002 Message Id: cdl-16-1-008 ***Received on Wednesday, 12 June, 2002