MN Wild Animal Damage Control | Animal Clean-Up
May 8, 2012
Managing Wild Animal Damage Moles
BIOLOGY AND BEHAVIOR
Moles live underground and inhabit the lawns of residential homes, golf courses, cemeteries, and parks, as well as fallow fields, forest edges, or pastures where moist, sandy loam soils are common and digging is easy. Three species of moles are native to Virginia: Read the rest of this entry »
MN Rodent Prevention
Commercial and Farm Buildings
Store bulk foods in rodent-proof buildings, rooms, or containers whenever possible. Stack packaged food on pallets with adequate space left around and under stored articles to allow inspection for signs of rats. Drain holes in dumpsters should be fitted with a removable hardware-cloth screen, or else plugged after each cleaning. Read the rest of this entry »
Minnesota Wild Animal Management | Mice and Rats
May 1, 2012
MN Mice and Rats Control
Part 4 of 5
Rats have voracious appetites. A rat can eat a third of its body weight each day. The rat is a true omnivore. It will eat anything, including soap, leather, furs, candy, milk, meat, vegetables, poultry, eggs, grain, seeds, fruit, nuts, snails and other rodents. Rats will catch fish, and they readily eat carrion. Near homes, rats thrive on pet food, birdseed, grass seed, garbage, dog feces, and the uneaten or spoiled food we discard. While rats will eat nearly anything, they prefer grain, livestock feed, and meat. Unlike the mouse, which nibbles a little at a time, rats will fill up at one sitting, if possible. Rats will hoard and cache food, which can result in insect infestations. Like mice, rats will live in freezers, feeding only on frozen food. Rats eat so much that one rat can leave behind 25,000 droppings per year. The rat’s main constraint is that it cannot go long without water unless its diet supplies enough. Rats need up to one ounce of water every day. Read the rest of this entry »
Minnesota Wild Animal Management | Rodents and Rats
April 26, 2012
MN Rodents and Rats Control
Part 3 of 5
The Rat
The Norway rat (Rattus norvegicus) is strong, very aggressive, and able to adapt to cold climates.
- Rats are 12-18 inches long, and weigh up to 16 ounces.
- Rat muzzles are blunt, and their bodies look thick and heavy.
- They have small eyes, naked ears, and coarse fur.
- Rat tails are 6-9 inches long, scaly and nearly naked.
- They have brown to dark gray fur, with scattered black hairs, and are gray, grayish brown or dirty white underneath. Read the rest of this entry »
Minnesota Wild Animal Management
April 24, 2012
Mice, Mouse Rodent Control – Minneapolis St Paul Minnesota
Part 2 of 5
The House Mouse
The house mouse (Mus musculus) is by far the most common mammal on earth. Native to central Asia, the mouse arrived in North America with the first European colonists. Mice can now be found all across North America, in every state including coastal Alaska, and in all but northernmost Canada. Read the rest of this entry »
Minneapolis MN Raccoon Removal | Remove Raccoons Safely
April 12, 2012
Minneapolis Raccoon Removal MN | MN Raccoon Control
Raccoons can become a huge nuisance very quickly. As with all animals, they usually just do what they need to do to survive. Oftentimes this means ripping a hole in your roof and living in your attic. Once inside, they can really trash the place. These animals can knock over garbage cans, tear up your lawn, nest in your chimney, attics, or under your deck, and also ruin gardens. Read the rest of this entry »
Mice and Rodent Control, Removal, Prevention MN
April 5, 2012
Mice and Rodent Control MN | MN Mice, Mouse Rodent Control
Rodents can be cute in cartoons and movies, but not so much when they find their way into your home. Your house, especially your kitchen provides all that a mouse could possibly ask for. Most experts in mice and rodent control, say the best way to keep mice out of your house is, well, to keep them out. In other words, any opening larger than, say, a pencil, should be sealed. Read the rest of this entry »
Wild Animal Management MN | Bat Removal
Bats are not your average pest control problem. There are no “quick-fix” traps or chemicals that work. Bats may start out as a simple nuisance. However, each year the size of the colony grows. Increased numbers of bats bring increased odors, encounters, bat mites, risk, and property damage. This is one of those problems that will not just go away! Read the rest of this entry »
Minnesota Wild Animal and Pest Control
March 27, 2012
Wild Life Management and Pest Control MN | Remove Gophers, Skunks Bats, Pests
Wild animal and pest control is important no matter what the season. While some do hibernate during the winter, others actively work on building warm nests year round, often inside homes. With 24% of homeowners reporting mice infestations specifically in the winter, they are among the top pest issues of the season. Read the rest of this entry »
Remove Raccoon From Minnesota Home
March 22, 2012
Raccoons Preventing and Controlling Property Damage
Raccoons are intelligent, curious, brazen at times, and even appear to be cute and cuddly. Make no mistake, raccoons are not domesticated like a cat or dog, they are wild animals. These seemingly friendly critters have sharp teeth and claws and will get nasty if they are cornered by a person or another animal like a dog. Raccoons are wild animals and no attempt should be made to pick them up or pet them, even if they appear tame. Read the rest of this entry »