HOME
Traps (Wildlife)
Vents
Sprayers
Moisture/Fungus
Odor/Air Purification
Do-it-yourself Supplies
Repellents
(Predator Urine)
Tree Care
Our Services
Our Crew
Our Email
Toll-FREE 
For Orders:
1-877-800-6884
Customer Service:
Dial Bugs
1-901-365-BUGS
Fax:
901-365-3955
Online Map
Return
Policies/Disclaimers
ON SALE ITEMS
USA Shipping Only

weblogo.gif (13885 bytes)

do.gif (1120 bytes)

  Mouse Facts

      By mid-fall of every year, through out most of the U.S. and similar temperate zones, domestic mice and rats and some  other local outdoors species will ,have already found the places they plan to spend the winter. There may not yet be enough  signs for you to notice them, their droppings or other signs, but that could change quickly. They have most likely  begun producing their next litters, and have found and laid down trails to the places where you keep the food and nesting materials they will need for the next several months. One morning soon, you may be surprised to find a hole chewed in your cereal box or rodent droppings on your kitchen counter, or even mouse hairs on your dishes.

  ·   The house mouse is the most common pest in and around human living and working places. They damage and destroy materials by gnawing, eating your food (especially cereal products or nuts), attacking decorations such as floral or harvest/grain" arrangements. They can carry human diseases and ectoparasites that may bite people or pets. The house mouse has a head-plus-body length of about 2.5 to 3.5 inches, and is gray with dull white belly fur. An adult only weighs about an ounce, but they eat often (nibble) and leave their typical `calling card' droppings at places where they sat down to feed for a little while. Mouse droppings are long and pointed compared to the larger, blunt droppings of rats.

Mice may look cuddly, but they breed rapidly. A house mouse can breed 35 days after it was born, and can have its own first litter of up to eight pups by the time it is 60 days old. Although they usually live only about a year, if all their offspring lived and reproduced at a similar rate, one pair of house mice could produce a population of more than 500 mice in one year.

Mice are good at climbing and jumping. They can jump about a foot straight up, and can jump down more than six feet without getting hurt. An adult mouse can squeeze through a crack or hole as small as 3/8-inch across and can quickly climb straight up an eight-foot wall of brick or wood paneling in less than half a minute. Even though one mouse doesn't eat much, as their population grows, they can eat a surprising amount of food. They also damage food containers, and their droppings and urine droplets contaminate a lot more food than they eat. In a year, one mouse produces up to 18,000 droppings; and it will deposit hundreds of micro-droplets of urine every day as it marks its trails.

      Mice can spread more than 20 kinds of organisms that can cause diseases of humans and pets. These include a variety of food poisoning bacteria like Salmonella, Shigella, E. coli, and others; tapeworms, mites, ticks, and rickettsial pox. Other rodents, which are widespread and may also come indoors for the winter such as deer mice and white-footed mice which can carry and spread other disease organisms like Hantavirus, plague and Lyme Disease.

Hantavirus is a deadly disease spread over most of the U.S. As of June 2002, of the 318 human cases reported by the CDC, from 31 states, 37% have been fatal. Deer mice (Peromyscus maniculatus) are a major host of the virus. The virus is transmitted to humans via dust that is inhaled after it has been contaminated by the mouse’s saliva, urine, and feces.

The white-footed mouse (Peromyscus leucopus) is distributed through the contiguous 48 states of the U.S. This mouse plays a vital role in the life cycle of Lyme Disease. According to the CDC, over 16,000 human cases of Lyme Disease were reported during the year 2000. Although it is infected ticks that bite humans and pets, the white-footed mouse is the source of the bacteria that causes the disease. The larva tick, soon after it hatches, feeds on the mouse and gets infected. Elimination of this mouse species near homes and businesses can reduce this public health threat.

Safeguard your family and business health by using Kaput® Mouse Blocks.

Kaput® Bait Block 
For the Control of Deer Mice and White-footed Mice

The white-footed mouse is an important vector in the life cycle of Lyme Disease. When a tick hatches, it seeks a single blood meal. In the mid-west, northeast, and southern states, the tick will feed on the white-footed mouse. The larva picks up the infection from the white-footed mouse. The following season, the nymphal or adult will seek a blood mean, and often this is a human (in the backyard, camping, or hiking). In biting the human the bacteria that causes Lyme disease is transmitted the person, which develops into Lyme disease within a couple of weeks.

Kaput® Bait Block is the only product approved in the US to control the white-footed mouse, an important vector that contributes to the spread of a very serious disease.

About Mice:
General Biology: (House mice, deer mice and white-footed mice)

  • Life span is 1-2 years 

  • Can have as many as 8 litters in one year. Breeding life of females 6-10 litters. 

  • Litter size is usually 6 young. Young mice can begin breeding at 6-10 weeks of age. 

  • Eyesight is poor; however, very good sense of smell, hearing and touch 

  • Mice are omnivorous, meaning they will eat various foods such as grains, insects, seeds, fruit, vegetation, etc. 

  • Active mostly at night, but can be seen during the day 

  • Live in a hierarchical system with dominant males ruling a territory 

  • All mature mice tend to show aggression toward strange individuals of either sex 

  • House mice are gray to brown on back with underside a lighter shade of color on back, sometimes creamy 

  • Deer mice and white-footed mice have larger eyes and ears than the house mouse. Deer mice and white-footed mice also are light brown/tan on top, with a distinctly white underside 

  • Deer mice have a distinct bi-colored tail that is white on bottom, and white-footed mice do not 

Interesting Facts:

  • Mice contaminate food and grain more so than rats. In 6 months one pair can consume about 4 lbs. of food and deposit about 18,000 droppings. 

  • Quick to explore any physical changes in their environment 

  • Capable swimmers if they need to be 

  • Can squeeze through openings slightly larger than ¼ inch in diameter 

  • They are excellent jumpers for their size, and can jump a foot high from the floor to an elevated flat surface 

  • When rats are eliminated, house mice move in, or increase in population. 

  • Reportedly house mice will drive away deer mice and white-footed mice. 

Why Rodent Control:

  • World Health Organization estimates that about 33 million tons of food is destroyed world-wide each year. 

  • Rodents destroy property by their constant chewing. 

  • Rodents can put livestock at risk of death and disease. 

  • Rodents can carry diseases to humans such as rat bite fever, leptospirosis, salmonellosis, and plague to name a few. 

Deer mouse range White-footed mouse range

Mice are nocturnal creatures, and, therefore, are rarely seen by the homeowner. The most obvious indicators of their presence are droppings (1/8 - 1/2-inches long, dark and pointed at both ends), sounds of them running, gnawing or squeaking, or damage to stored food or materials used for nesting.

Compared to rats, mice forage only short distances from their nest -- usually not more than 10-25 feet. When food and shelter are adequate, their foraging range may be only a few feet. For this reason, traps and other control devices must be placed in areas where mouse activity is most apparent. Mice prefer to travel adjacent to walls and other edges-- another critical point to remember when positioning control devices. Mice are very inquisitive and will investigate each new object placed in their foraging territory. If control devices are not initially successful, move them around to a different location.

Mice feed on a wide variety of foods but prefer seeds and cereal grains. They also are fond of foods high in fat and    protein such as nuts, bacon, butter and sweets (an important point to remember when choosing a bait for snap traps). Mice are "nibblers" and may make 20-30 visits to different food sites each night.

^ Top ^

 Tactics for Control  

To control mice, you must "think like a mouse," keeping in mind the behavioral traits noted above. The best way to    control mice is to prevent their entry. Mice are able to squeeze through extremely small openings narrower than the diameter of a dime. Cracks in the foundation 1/4 inch and larger should be sealed, as should gaps and openings under doors and where utility pipes enter the structure.

Good sanitation and food storage practices are helpful in reducing problems with house mice. Since seeds are a preferred food, all adjacent to the building should likewise be eliminated. However, because mice are able to occupy such small nesting areas and survive on minute amounts of food, sanitation alone will not normally eliminate an existing infestation.

          Other than calling a pest control firm, homeowners have three control options available for ridding their 
    premises of mice:

·        baits, known as rodenticides, Live traps or Lethal Traps or glue boards.

   

^ Top ^

 Rodenticides  

Rodenticides Marketed to homeowners are formulated almost exclusively as food-based baits containing seeds or grain as an attractant. Most rodenticides sold over the counter are anticoagulants containing brodifacoum, chlorophacinone, diphacinone or warfarin as active ingredients. They kill by interfering with normal clotting of the  rodents' blood, causing the animal to die from internal bleeding. Since mice forage only short distances from their  nests, optimum results are achieved with multiple bait placements as close to the mouse harborage as possible. Extreme care must be taken to position baits in areas inaccessible to children or pets. Dogs, in particular, will  seek out and find baits placed in areas which are accessible.

 

^ Top ^

 Traps  

Traps are generally preferred over rodenticide (baits) when only a few mice are present. Traps are less hazardous to  use around children and pets. Because mice are caught by the trap, there is less chance of odor from mice dying in wall voids or other inaccessible areas. Trapping efficiency will be enhanced by placing small pieces of bacon, gum  drops, peanut butter or raisins in the trigger hole. Research has shown that traps with an expanded trigger catch
significantly more mice than conventional designs. Another type of trap available is a multiple-catch mouse trap.

This device can capture and hold a dozen or more mice before needing to be emptied. We have expanded trigger  Snap-E Mouse Traps  and the multiple-catch mouse trap 24/7 Trapper right her for your purchase.

Regardless of which design is used, traps should be placed up against walls, behind objects, and in secluded 
areas where mouse droppings, gnawing and damage are evident. Snap traps should be oriented perpendicular 
to the wall, with the trigger end facing the vertical surface of a wall, even when using the Protecta Mouse Stations.  Multiple-catch traps should be oriented with the entrance hole parallel to the wall.

^ Top ^

 Glueboards

       Glueboards also are very effective against mice. Mice become entangled in the glue when they run over the boards, soon dying of suffocation. In addition to traps, they are the method of choice in homes and other sensitive locations where toxic baits are a concern. Should the glue from a glue board contact the fur of a pet or the skin of a child,  it can be removed with mineral or vegetable oil.

Snap-E Mouse Traps the 24/7 Live Trap and glue boards should be checked daily and dead mice disposed  of in plastic bags. Gloves should be worn when handling mouse carcasses to prevent any chance of disease.


Critter Ridders®
Simmons Pest Management, Inc.
2938 Ridgeway Rd.
Memphis, Tenn.  38115
Dial Bugs® 901.365.BUGS

        Design by                                                 
Devine Services2.gif (2330 bytes)

® Registered Service Mark of Critter Ridders, Inc.