Rodenticides
Diseases Rats and Mice Spread
Rodenticides
Related topics
Controlling Rat and Mouse PopulationsDiseases Rats and Mice Spread
Rodenticides
Rodenticides are efficient
in destroying rats and mice. Full
advantage should be taken of the particular
characteristics) of each rodenticide to select those most likely to produce the
desired results under existing conditions. Many chemicals used as rodenticides
require that the applicator possess a certified applicator permit prior to
purchasing the chemicals. Additional rodenticide information pertaining to
brand names is available.
1.Zinc Phosphide
Of
the single-dose (quick kill) poisons, zinc phosphide may be the most
satisfactory, readily available material. It has an offensive odor and is
unattractive in color. Rats and mice seem to be attracted by the odor of zinc
phosphide, and all species accept it.
Zinc
phosphide is not absorbed through the skin while mixing, and only seldom are
animals killed from eating the carcasses of rats or mice that have been killed
with zinc phosphide. Zinc phosphide is, therefore, listed as mildly hazardous
in its use as a rodenticide. Cause of death is heart failure
2. Vacor Vacor
A
a single-dose, acute rodenticide; death normally occurs in 4 to 8 hours after
ingestion. Little or no bait shyness develops, and it is recommended to be
effective against most species of rats and mice. Vacor is most readily
available in a formulated ready-to-use bait mixture but is also available to
licensed professional applicators in the form of a tracking powder.
Strychnine Strychnine is a
highly toxic single-dose poison that is effective for mouse control only. It
has a bitter taste that causes many rodents, including rats, to avoid it.
Therefore, it is not effective against rats. For best results, do not use
strychnine more often than at six month intervals.
3. Strychnine
Usually mixed with canary
seed, some cereal grain, or other bait that mice prefer. Cause of death is
respiratory failure.
4.Arsenic
Arsenic
is a single-dose rodenticide. It is slow acting and toxic to all animals. It is
classified as extremely hazardous. Mice will not accept it. Less hazardous and
more effective poisons are available; therefore, arsenic is seldom used any
more as a rodenticide.
5.Red Squill
Red
squill is another good quick-kill poison. There is even less hazard in using
red squill than with zinc phosphide because it causes animals other than rats
and mice to vomit and eliminate the poison.
The drawbacks to red squill, compared to zinc
phosphide, are that it is effective only against the Norway rat, is generally
less acceptable by all rats, has poor reacceptance after sublethal intake, has
less overall killing effectiveness, and is not readily available for purchase.
Mix red squill with baits at
the rate of 10 percent red squill. Cause of death is respiratory failure.
6.Sodium Fluoroacetate
(1080)
This
material, commonly known as 1080, is one of the most effective rodenticides
known. It is virtually tasteless and odorless and kills in one to eight hours.
No tolerance or bait shyness develops.
The drawbacks are that it is
highly toxic to all animals, has no antidote, and has a high degree of
secondary poisoning for animals eating rats or mice killed by 1080. As a
result, 1080 is classified as extremely hazardous and is available for use only
by licensed professional applicators. Cause of death is heart paralysis.
7.Phosphorus
Phosphorus
is used little today because better, safer rodenticides are available.
8.Norbormide
Norbormide is not presently available as a
rodenticide.
9.Antu
Antu
is used to a limited extent to control Norway rats. It is not considered
effective enough for house mice or roof rats
Anticoagulants
""Brodifacoum, bromadiolone, chlorophacinone,
diphacinone, fumarin, pival, PMP, warfarin, and prolin (warfarin plus a vitamin
K inhibitor) are all anticoagulant-type poisons""
At recommended
concentrations, repeated feedings are normally necessary to cause death. One
dose is seldom lethal. Therefore, anticoagulant baits must be made available
continuously for 5 to 14 days. Reasonable control of rats may not always occur
within two weeks, and it may require as long as a month to control mice. The
necessity for repeated doses is a built-in safety feature of the anticoagulants
for most animals.
Anticoagulants are, in
general, classified as a low-hazard method of rat and mouse poisoning because
of the multiple feeding requirement. They are effective against both rats and
mice and, when used at the recommended level, bait shyness is not developed.
The drawbacks to anticoagulants are that bait placements have to be made for
several days, there is danger to animals feeding on the carcasses of rodents
killed by anticoagulants (cats and dogs are very susceptible to anticoagulants
and may be killed by a single feeding of poisoned bait), and resistance to
anticoagulants may develop in a population of rats or mice
best to change anticoagulants periodically). Some rat and mouse
populations have become resistant to warfarin.
You may use anticoagulants
with any of the baits or bait mixtures rats and mice accept. However, since the
anticoagulant poison bait must remain available for several days for rats and
mice to feed on, anticoagulants are usually mixed with some type of cereal
grain or dry-feed-type bait as opposed to baits like apples and prunes.
Anticoagulants and
single-dose poisons are available in concentrate form for use in custom mixing
and in commercially prepared poison and bait mixtures. You can get these
mixtures in wax-impregnated-pelleted or block form, in small bags or boxes, or
in oil-soaked bait form, all of which help protect the bait and poison from
breakdown from the environment until rats or mice eat it.
Tracking Powders
There are no chlorinated
hydrocarbons approved as a tracking powder. Antu is effective only for Norway
rats. Rozol is an anticoagulant registered for rat and mouse control. Warfarin
is registered for mouse control.
Vacor is classified as a
quick-kill poison and is available to licensed professional applicators as a
tracking powder. Tracking powders are not recommended where rodents can track
the poison onto food destined for consumption by other animals. Therefore, be
careful when using tracking powders in occupied poultry houses.
Fumigation
Fumigants such as methylbromide and others are fast and effective controls for rats and mice in burrows or tightly closed buildings. Be extremely careful; leave the application of
Controlling Rat and Mouse Populations
Diseases Rats and Mice Spread
Rodenticides
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