Subject: Wood borer infestation
Katja Telp <katjatelp [at] sbcglobal__net> writes >A polychrome wooden sculpture I am restoring has some alarming wood >borer infestation, and it is nothing I have ever seen before. The >exit holes are enormous, about an inch long and oval. The undigested >wood shavings from the holes are 3/4 inches long. Response from Brian Ridout in the UK "The holes would either be made by a longhorn beetle (Cerambycidae) or a Jewel beetle (Buprestidae). The presence of 'shavings' in the oval holes suggests the latter. Beetle larvae from either family can live for many years in wood and I have known them emerge from exhibits that have been in museum collections for at least a decade. The literature suggests that fifty years is not uncommon. Dry wood is not a problem for a well-grown larva--they will not re-infest. The beetle would certainly have laid its eggs before the sculpture came to California in 2006. Where did it come from? If from Mexico then there would be many possibilities." Bryan Blundell jbb [at] prginc__com *** Conservation DistList Instance 21:1 Distributed: Saturday, April 28, 2007 Message Id: cdl-21-1-007 ***Received on Tuesday, 17 April, 2007