Conclusion: Dehumidifying the environment to minimize dampness will allow rare books that cannot be treated with insecticide to be "stored" "without risking damage" from paper lice.
Evidence/Premise:
1 Paper" lice" feed on microscopic "spores" of a certain fungus that grows primarily in "damp" areas;
2 these fungal "spores" are present on the pages of a book, the paper lice will also ingest the paper comprising the pages unless the paper is treated with insecticide.
3 "rare" and valuable books are too fragile to be treated with insecticide.
Pre Assumption : Dehumid will allows the 1.spore not to grow and 2.kill the lice/fungi 3.Dehumid can work in damp area 4.remove risk of storage
situation: Humid-> Spore -> Lice -> paper eaten -> induce risk of storage
A. Paper lice can be prevented from entering an area that is being dehumidified.
1, Half-answered solution, ok, so the lice has been prevented , but the spore remains, then lice comes, and prevent ... repeated vicious cycle... problem not solve....
(no gap closed, this only talks about the conclusion, what closes the gap and the evidences/premises?

)
2,Negate: paper lice cannot be prevented
(how about the spore, and the risk of storage? the conclusion asking to attack store and spore)
C. After the fungus has been eliminated, fungal spores do not remain in any significant quantity.
1, OK, spore eliminated, most likely won't attract lice.
2, Negate: After fungi eliminated, fungi spore remain significant
( This answered the gap, since conclusion asking to attack store and spore )