Subject: Silverfish
Holly Chase <holly.chase [at] sunrider__com> writes >Does finding one silverfish and a few dead moths justify treating >all the artwork and cases in that gallery? I'd say, yes. As a rule of thumb in regards to insect infestations, no insects is better than a few live or dead ones. No insect damage being the goal, a total absence of live or dead insects is the route. If you don't have one, you ought to begin a program of integrated pest management (IPM) now. On one hand, it could be that the insect you found is only a random, single intruder from outdoors, but on the other hand, you may have discovered an enterprising individual insect who strayed from the central feast that is a glue joint in one of your hangings. You won't know which until a thorough, knowledgeable search fails to find an infestation anywhere in your collection. Pheromone traps might be a good idea somewhere within the museum, but not necessarily within the showcases. You definitely do not want to lure pests into the showcases or storage cabinets. You must begin searching through your facility and the collection for any other insect life. You must empty, sweep and vacuum, and clean your showcases, you must begin mapping the facility to identify where you are going to place your lures and/or traps, then identify, date, and install the sticky traps and/or lures, and then begin monitoring whatever kind of insect presence you discover in your lures and traps. Are numbers trapped on the rise? Begin with a weekly inspection; after a month without exciting finds, perhaps monthly sweeps will suffice. As one of my esteemed colleagues says, you have to think of insects like a gas: they can go anywhere, and you cannot keep them out of a museum. You simply must be determined, organized, and perseverant in trying to find and eliminate them. They're very good at hiding, as you know. "Anoxia" means without oxygen; all stages of insect life can be suffocated if deprived of oxygen for about two weeks. The anoxic method we use here tends to be carbon dioxide, which works well and is not too expensive. I believe many American museums use nitrogen chambers instead, to avoid contributing CO2 to the environment. Whatever the method, I imagine that the famous museums in southern California either have fumigation chambers themselves or engage private firms that fumigate anoxically for them, and they ought to be able to suggest who can fumigate your collection for you. Anoxic fumigation leaves no poisonous residue that might damage your collection. The downside of the absence of a poisonous residue is that there nothing to stop re-infestation, except for your continued vigilance. As for eliminating insects hiding within a built-in showcase, you can be sure it isn't easy. If the showcase was removable, you could anoxically fumigate it as well. For a built-in unit, I think all you can do is clean it very well with a brush and vacuum. Perhaps you can also paint it on the inside with a paint approved for display case interiors. The smell ought to kill a few insects. Perhaps you can find a kind of caulking that is not dangerous to artifacts, and you can seal all the little cracks between showcase and wall. After painting and caulking, the showcase will have to air out for some weeks to allow offgassing to mostly end before you reuse the showcase. Some old museums have come to terms with historically interesting, if insect plagued, built-in display cases, and accept a low level of insect activity as the price of continuing to use the showcases. They continue to use sticky traps inside the cases, in spaces out of sight from the public and separate from the volume containing the display material, to trap and destroy insects. They avoid poisons, owing to the danger to the public, staff, and artifacts. Sticky traps kill, too. Museum pest control is a big subject with its own discussion group. These are just some tips. As another rule of thumb, I am guessing that, if you rigorously clean and trap and monitor insect activity for six months in all showcases, storage areas, loading docks, areas where food is consumed, offices, entrance areas, and so on, without finding one more protein-eating museum insect pest, then you probably do not have an active infestation. You might still have one, but that is a pretty long time for an insect colony to exist without an adventuresome individual insect wandering off and getting caught in one of your traps. The danger is that one normally finds the damage before one finds the pests. If I were you, I'd reinvigorate your IPM program now and vigorously sustain it. I hope you enjoy reading more about IPM, and good hunting. James Hay Senior Conservator Furniture and Decorative Arts Canadian Conservation Institute 1030 Innes Road Ottawa Ontario K1A 0M5 Canada *** Conservation DistList Instance 21:12 Distributed: Wednesday, June 20, 2007 Message Id: cdl-21-12-002 ***Received on Tuesday, 19 June, 2007