 |
|
Our rodent and critter control program has four important steps:
- A thorough inspection to identify the species, where
they’re nesting, and what factors are attracting them.
- Creating
effective sanitation so that rodents are denied both food and hiding places.
- Eliminating all potential entry points.
- Reducing
the population by applying poison, bait, and traps.
To
learn more about specific rodents, click here
|
No one can take an accurate rat census, but experts often estimate there is one rat for every person
living in the United States.

The roof rat is believed to be the same breed of rat that carried the fleas that carried the bubonic plague
bacillus that killed 75 million people worldwide from the 1300s to the 18th century. Each year, rats destroy
approximately 20% of all the agricultural products in the world. They carry more than 30 diseases harmful to humans, such
as typhus, the plague, rat-bite fever, Weil's disease, Chagas' disease, rickettsial pox, tuleremia, Lassa fever, lymphocytic
choriomeningitis, and rabies. No other mammal surpasses the rat except man himself in the level of death, destruction, and
economic devastation that he causes, Hendrickson writes. Part of what makes rats so awful and yet amazing is their tremendous
survival instincts and physical abilities. Consider these chilling facts: Rats can swim one-half mile in open water
-- that's like swimming the length of Barton Springs Pool two and a half times -- and can tread water for up to three
days. Rats can travel through sewer pipes and dive through water plumbing traps -- more on this later. Rats can climb brick walls, trees, and telephone poles, and walk across telephone lines. "They get around
as good as squirrels, maybe even better," Dotson said. Rats can fall from a height of 50 feet without
getting hurt. Rats can jump three feet in the air from a flat surface and leap four feet horizontally. Rats can scamper through openings as small as a quarter: If a rat can get her head through, she's in. Rats
can detect poison mixed with food in as little as two parts per million. Rats can chew through lead, cinder
block, and aluminum sheeting -- rats' teeth grow about four inches a year, and they have to gnaw on things to keep their
teeth from pushing through their skulls.
|
 |