A 1830s Savannah townhouse, a wood-frame antebellum cottage, and the curatorial wing of a museum collection all share two characteristics: organic materials at risk from Anobiidae (powderpost beetles) and Reticulitermes termites, and a mandate against the broad-spectrum chemistry conventional pest control relies on.
Heritage IPM substitutes monitoring for spray-and-pray. We use pheromone traps that detect pest pressure species-by-species. We use thermal treatments where we'd otherwise reach for liquid termiticide. We document conditions over time so the building's care team has data the next steward can read.
What we don't do: prophylactic perimeter sprays. What we limit: chemical applications that could deposit on collection objects, fabrics, or finished architectural surfaces. What we add: written condition reports that go into the property's permanent file alongside its conservation reports.