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Opinion: Use natural methods for pesky rodents


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By Stella McMillin

Rats, mice and voles are commonly sighted around homes and businesses this time of year. The California Department of Fish and Wildlife encourages Californians to let nature control rodent populations by actively protecting their natural predators – owls, hawks, falcons, eagles and vultures – rather than using poisons to eliminate pests. Environmentally friendly tactics such as providing tall trees that raptors favor will encourage these birds of prey to hang around your yard and remove rodents for you.

Most raptors use the same nest for many years and some even pass from one generation to the next. Bald eagles are known to have used the same nest as long as 35 years. That makes them an excellent long-term control for rodent populations in the immediate area.

During breeding season, a family of five owls can eat as many as 3,000 rodents. You can encourage them by hanging a nest box on your property, but please don’t do that if you or any of your neighbors are using anticoagulant rodenticides. Remember that poisoned rodents can poison the predators, scavengers and pets that eat them!

Even though the state Department of Pesticide Regulation and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency have restricted public access to the most dangerous rodenticides, all rodenticides – including the types still available to consumers – are poisons that can kill wildlife, pets and children.

More wildlife could be saved if people would use sanitation, removal and exclusion to keep rodents out of homes and reduce their numbers. Like most animals, rodents will congregate and multiply where food is available and they feel safe. The easiest way to discourage them is to remove or modify anything that could make them comfortable. Sanitation is the first step to controlling rodents. For example:

  • Keep your home and yard neat and clean. Don’t give rats places to hide.
  • Remove objects and plants that rodents can hide under, such as wood piles, debris, construction waste, dense vegetation and ground-covering vines like ivy.
  • Pick up fruit that has fallen from trees as soon as possible.
  • Secure your garbage in a tightly sealed can.
  • Seal water leaks and remove standing water that can attract unwelcome animals, breed mosquitoes and waste water.

To remove unwelcome rodents, set traps in secluded areas where they’ve been seen or are likely to travel: close to walls, behind objects, in dark corners, on ledges, shelves, fences, pipes and garage rafters. In areas where children, pets or birds might go, put the trap inside a box or use some kind of barrier for their safety. Check traps daily and wear disposable gloves when removing rodents from traps. Place them in a sealed plastic bag then into your garbage bin for weekly collection. Wash your hands after handling traps or rodents, even when using gloves.

Once you’ve removed mice and rats from inside the building, seal the entries they used to get in: openings where cables, wires and pipes enter buildings, and cracks or holes in the foundation, walls and roofs. Rodents can squeeze into holes as narrow as half inch diameter. Use hardware mesh and concrete, plaster or metal whenever possible. At the very least, stuff stainless steel or copper pot scrubbers, or Stuf-fit copper mesh wool into the spaces. All of these are sold online and at hardware and dollar stores.

If you feel you must use “rat poison,” please carefully follow the label directions for all rodenticides. Only use them in small treatment areas indoors or right against building walls in tamper-resistant bait stations, never out in open field or garden areas, where they’re most likely to reach wildlife and pets.

Stella McMillin works for the CDFW Wildlife Investigations Lab.

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Comments

Comments (10)
  1. yobobbyb says - Posted: April 23, 2015

    Bald eagles? Using raptors for natural control around your house? Good luck with that. Most people have never seen an eagle or owl let alone have one hanging out in their trees.

    What a silly article. Snap traps and peanut butter will be far more effective than waiting for your resident Bald Eagle to swoop down and clean them out. That is unless the bird has an Orkin uniform on and has been trained in rodent control.

  2. Dogula says - Posted: April 23, 2015

    We see lots of eagles around here. Unfortunately, they will grab your little dog or your cat as quickly as they will a rodent, so watch out.
    Love all the hawk perches along Hwy 395 down Minden way. . . that’s their rodent control!

  3. Kits Carson says - Posted: April 23, 2015

    I feed the rodents a pellet…..at 1200 fps

  4. Denise Upton says - Posted: April 23, 2015

    Silly article? We have lots of Hawks & Owls in the basin to control rodents! That is until someone decides to put out poison which in turn affects Raptors, Weasles, Pine Martin etc. and WHATEVER eats the dying mouse- chipmunk – squirrel etc. Yes snap traps work! Inside your house though- not outside! The black boxes you see around the perimeters of buildings to control ” rodents” kills everything that goes in them – not just mice! Put them IN your building where the mice have all ready gotten in & find out WHERE they are getting in! Secondary poisoning is a horrible thing to witness & YES if you can control mice the natural way – it IS the best choice!

  5. Isee says - Posted: April 23, 2015

    Kit Carson – You crack me-up. I agree with that kind of pellet….I think one of our cats got a poisoned mouse last summer. He survived but it was ugly. Please don’t use poison people.

  6. TeaTotal says - Posted: April 23, 2015

    yea that’s hilarious-running around your property shooting at rodents-what could possibly go wrong?

  7. k9woods says - Posted: April 23, 2015

    I’m all for no poison. Use steel wool to plug the holes (wear leather gloves when applying) and then get those hi-frequency noise generators and a couple of cats to keep them under control. Haven’t seen a mouse in the house in years.

    Now what to do with the ground dwellers outside that keep eating my flowers…..

  8. nature bats last says - Posted: April 24, 2015

    k9. Sprinkle cayene pepper or ground garlic around your flowers and bulbs. You have to reapply after watering if you use sprinklers but not if you are using drip lines. Put it on pretty thickly around the plants outer reaches so the critters get the pepper on their feet. It is a pretty good method but not 100%. Good luck!

  9. Patty P says - Posted: April 30, 2015

    I have used chicken wire whenever I plant a new plant to keep the gophers from its roots; voles and moles I think only make tunnels to eat bugs, BUT I can’t figure out a way to keep the bunnies from eating my plants. This of course has only been going on for the last few years as we didn’t have bunnies until about 5yrs ago. I have a completely drought resistant yard, no grass; gravel and gardens with a drip system but do enjoy flowers! Any suggestions? PS – no one in my neighborhood would use poison as we all have dogs, cats are kept in the house due to coyotes. Whoever wrote this article I would assume does not live in Tahoe or has a house at Kiva Beach where the bald eagles love to fish!!

  10. Old Long Skiis says - Posted: May 1, 2015

    Patty P,I have cottontails and raccoons in my garden. I to bought chicken wire but have yet to put it up. A neighbor told me he uses fox urine that you can buy and spray that around the perimiter of your garden to keep away the rabbits, voles and others. Worth a try.
    Happy gardening! Just planted more wildflowers yesterday! OLS