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Facts About Rodents, Diseases & Pest Management in Colorado
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Rodents
Animals that may come indoors during winter include mice, rats, squirrels, and sometimes even raccoons and opossums.
Rodents may come in through almost any opening – pet doors, holes in walls, missing vent screens, openings around pipes, dryer ducts vents, etc.
The roof may also be a handy highway into your home. Rats can climb plants or trees that are too close to the house. That’s where roof rats get their name.
Mice can squeeze through spaces as small as a nickel.
Rats can squeeze through a space as small as a half dollar.
Rodents usually can spread diseases, including potentially lethal hantavirus and arena virus.
In the U.S., rodents try to come inside from October through February.
An estimated that 21 million homes in the U.S. are invaded by rodents each year winter.
House mice constantly give off hundreds of micro-droplets of urine as they travel around their territory every day. A large medical research study showed a protein in house mouse urine called mouse urinary protein (MUP), caused allergies in 18% of the inner city children studied.
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You know you have rodents when you can hear scampering or gnawing sounds late at night in the attic or behind walls.
Rodent droppings may be found in undisturbed areas of the house such as pantries, attics, garages, under baseboards, and along walls.
Telltale signs of rodents’ gnawing may be seen on packaged goods, cardboard boxes, and walls near pipes and vents.
Inside, rodents can be very destructive. They chew through wallboards and can eat through cardboard boxes, wood, and plaster.
Rodents gnaw on electrical wiring that could potentially cause an electrical fire.
Diseases associated with rodents
• Rodents carry disease and fleas and leave waste.
• Wild and domestic rodents have been reported to harbor and spread as many as 200 human pathogens.
• Rodents, primarily the harmless-looking deer mouse and pack rats, can spread the potentially deadly hantavirus and arena virus.
• Hantavirus was first identified when soldiers in the Korean War fell ill with hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS).
• Hantavirus is contracted primarily by inhaling airborne particles from rodent droppings, urine or saliva left by infected rodents or through direct contact with infected rodents.
• The Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome (HPS), while relatively rare, kills nearly half the people who develop it.
• After suffering from flu-like symptoms, victims of lethal cases of HPS die quickly from severe lung damage.
Keeping rodents out
• To keep mice and other rodents out, make sure that all holes of larger diameter than a pencil are sealed.
• Also seal any cracks and voids.
• Don’t overlook proper drainage at the foundation and always install gutters or diverts which will channel the water away from the building.
• Your local pest management firm can help provide information on and may even do pest proofing.
• If you find rodents in your home, knowing when to call an expert is important.
• Call a local pest management professional to identify the problem, survey for, and control the rodents using n Integrated Pest Management (IPM) approach.
• Searching out the hiding places of rodents and other pests and precisely targeting management efforts requires a competent, knowledgeable, and technically-trained specialist.
• A pest management professional has the special training, experience and tools necessary to assure adequate protection against such destructive pests.
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Don't be sorry... Get it Done Right The First Time!!! |
Mountain Pest Control has been a long standing member in the National Pest Management Association. This keeps us abreast of current legislation and the most modern techniques & tools in our industry. Our management imparts this knowledge to our technicians on a regular basis to insure you are getting the best service available.
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Give us a call today!
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MOUNTAIN PEST CONTROL
3758 Highway 82,
Glenwood Springs, CO 81601
Phone: (970) 945-5942 FAX: (970) 945-1305
Email: mtnpest@msn.com |
MOUNTAIN PEST
440 Independent Ave. #2
Grand Junction, CO.81505
Phone: (970) 245-7711 FAX: (970) 243-2143
Email:mtnpest@msn.com |
 Also Serving: Aspen/Snowmass,Vail/Beaver Creek, Summit County, Montrose, Delta, Telluride, Gunnison, Crested Butte. |
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Provided courtesy of Colorado State University Cooperative Extension
Photographs courtesy of Judy Sedbrook. |
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