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. On a side note from the problem of identifying wood-borers, someone mentioned that anything that can eat its way through wood is unlikely to be stopped by a plastic bag. I can report that in the UK, polythene bubblewrap can sometimes be effective. A sample of timber had been frozen to treat a common woodworm (Anobium punctatum) infestation. The wood was then wrapped in acid-free tissue paper and bubblewrap for transport. It was left in its wrappings in store and when unwrapped recently several dead deathwatch beetles were found between the tissue and bubblewrap. Their fresh exit holes from the wood could clearly be identified, as could their tunnelling through the acid-free tissue above. They appeared to have then wandered between the bubbles and eventually perished. No marks of chewing or exit holes could be found in the bubblewrap. It's annoying that the freezing did not kill the deathwatch larvae, but comforting that the infestation did not spread to the store because of the bubblewrap. Best wishes Helena Jaeschke Conservation Development Officer +44 1392 665951 Royal Albert Memorial Museum Queen Street, Exeter EX4 3RX *** Conservation DistList Instance 21:3 Distributed: Thursday, May 10, 2007 Message Id: cdl-21-3-004 ***Received on Monday, 30 April, 2007