Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Thermohygrometric Climate, Insects and Fungi in the Klosterneuburg Monastic Library

View through CrossRef
The abundance of insect and fungal pests under a changing climate may threaten historic interiors, libraries and museums, with warmer, potentially more humid winters. This work examines local and indoor climate, insects and fungi in a historic library near Vienna. It reveals a mostly dry and cool environment for the storage of books, but few visitors to induce changes. Temperature and relative humidity have been monitored for 12 months (2021-07/2022-07), with 14 monitors positioned insect traps (blunder traps and some pheromone traps). Fungi in air, on surfaces and in settled dust were also sampled. Winter temperatures in library cupboards and behind shelves were slightly warmer (~1 °C) and more humid than in the library environment. Over the last decade there have been infestations of the biscuit beetles (Stegobium paniceum) but since treatment with sulfuryl difluoride, Anthrenus sp. have dominated. Silverfish are also present, but only in one corner. Fungal outbreaks have also been found, but over five years fungi in air samples have shifted from Penicillium commune and P. chrysogenum to Aspergillus sp. The stable environment at Klosterneuburg is suitable for books, yet insects and mould present suggests vigilance remains necessary, as some microenvironments (e.g., cupboards) can be at risk and there may be materials with high water content, hygroscopic or of nutritional value.
Title: Thermohygrometric Climate, Insects and Fungi in the Klosterneuburg Monastic Library
Description:
The abundance of insect and fungal pests under a changing climate may threaten historic interiors, libraries and museums, with warmer, potentially more humid winters.
This work examines local and indoor climate, insects and fungi in a historic library near Vienna.
It reveals a mostly dry and cool environment for the storage of books, but few visitors to induce changes.
Temperature and relative humidity have been monitored for 12 months (2021-07/2022-07), with 14 monitors positioned insect traps (blunder traps and some pheromone traps).
Fungi in air, on surfaces and in settled dust were also sampled.
Winter temperatures in library cupboards and behind shelves were slightly warmer (~1 °C) and more humid than in the library environment.
Over the last decade there have been infestations of the biscuit beetles (Stegobium paniceum) but since treatment with sulfuryl difluoride, Anthrenus sp.
have dominated.
Silverfish are also present, but only in one corner.
Fungal outbreaks have also been found, but over five years fungi in air samples have shifted from Penicillium commune and P.
chrysogenum to Aspergillus sp.
The stable environment at Klosterneuburg is suitable for books, yet insects and mould present suggests vigilance remains necessary, as some microenvironments (e.
g.
, cupboards) can be at risk and there may be materials with high water content, hygroscopic or of nutritional value.

Related Results

Climate-induced changes in the phenotypic plasticity of the Heath Fritillary, Melitaea athalia (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae)
Climate-induced changes in the phenotypic plasticity of the Heath Fritillary, Melitaea athalia (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae)
Recently a large number of studies have reported an increase in the variability in the climate, which affects behavioural and physiological adaptations in a broad range of organism...
From Waste to Climate
From Waste to Climate
Abstract It has often been said that the problem with climate change is its invisibility. People do not mobilize about climate change because they cannot see it; eve...
A Monastic Death Ritual from the Imperial Abbey of Farfa
A Monastic Death Ritual from the Imperial Abbey of Farfa
Lengthy and complex rituals surrounding illness and death were an important part of the collective experience of medieval monastic communities. In manuscripts from as early as the ...
Climate Apartheid: The Forgetting of Race in the Anthropocene
Climate Apartheid: The Forgetting of Race in the Anthropocene
AbstractDespite recognition of the gender dimensions of climate change, there is little attention to racism in climate justice perspectives. In response, this article advocates dev...
Entomotherapy, or the Medicinal Use of Insects
Entomotherapy, or the Medicinal Use of Insects
Insects and the substances extracted from them have been used as medicinal resources by human cultures all over the world. Besides medicine, these organisms have also played mystic...
What’s Happening to the Weather? Australian Climate, H. C. Russell, and the Theory of a Nineteen-Year Cycle
What’s Happening to the Weather? Australian Climate, H. C. Russell, and the Theory of a Nineteen-Year Cycle
The theory of a nineteen-year climate cycle put forward by acclaimed New SouthWales Government Astronomer Henry Chamberlain Russell is arguably one of his least successful contribu...
The Importance of Insects in Australian Aboriginal Society: A Dictionary Survey
The Importance of Insects in Australian Aboriginal Society: A Dictionary Survey
Insects and their products have long been used in Indigenous Australian societies as food, medicine and construction material, and given prominent roles in myths, traditional songs...
Rivers of God, Rivers of Empire: Climate Extremes, Environmental Transformation and Agroecology in Colonial Mexico
Rivers of God, Rivers of Empire: Climate Extremes, Environmental Transformation and Agroecology in Colonial Mexico
This paper explores the social-ecological effects of the Little Ice Age (1300-1850) in colonial Central Mexico. Archival research reconstructs the history of climate, soil, water a...

Back to Top