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Small Animal Damage Control

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Need for Control or Disease Vectors. Bird Control. Diseases of ... Black-Footed Ferret Searches. Dependent upon size of treatment area, species of prairie dog ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Small Animal Damage Control


1
Small Animal Damage Control
Hank Uhden WY Dept. Of Agriculture
2
Small Animal Damage Control
  • Manual Handouts
  • Purpose of Training
  • Training Outline
  • Commonly Used Products
  • Commonly Controlled Animals
  • Need for Control or Disease Vectors
  • Bird Control
  • Diseases of Major Health Concern
  • Plague, Rabies, Hantavirus

INTRODUCTION
3
Small Animal Damage Control
Objective of Control Program
  • Reduce and/or Eliminate Economic Loss
  • Access the Damage
  • Positive Pest Identification

Who ?... Me !?!
4
Small Animal Damage Control
Correct Control Solution
  • Preventive or Protective Control
  • Habitat Alteration
  • Removal of Food Supply
  • Exclusion
  • Aversion Techniques
  • Repellents
  • Pyrotechnics
  • Scare Devices
  • Trapping, Lethal Non-lethal
  • Epizootics
  • Toxicants
  • Shooting

5
Small Animal Damage Control
Toxicology
  • Bait
  • Food item w/ toxicant
  • Lethal Dose (LD)
  • LD LD
  • Milligrams of toxicant / kilogram of body
    weight
  • Lower LD s are more toxic

50
100
50
6
Small Animal Damage Control
Toxicology
  • Grains Commonly Used
  • Barley, Wheat, Oats
  • Grains
  • Whole
  • Mechanically Altered
  • Dependent upon 1) Pest to be controlled 2)
    Site of Application 3) Protection of non-targets

7
Small Animal Damage Control
Safety Precautions
  • Label Equipment
  • Poison
  • Skull Crossbones
  • Wear Respirator
  • Never carry toxicants in passenger compartment
  • Prohibit
  • Smoking, eating, or other hand to mouth contact

8
Small Animal Damage Control
Rodent Control
  • Rodenticides

Rodenticides are substances or a mixture of
substances intended for destroying, repelling, or
mitigating rodents.
9
Small Animal Damage Control
Rodent Control
  • Rodenticides
  • Color Additives
  • Protect seed eating birds
  • Aid in bait identification
  • Aid in bait preparation
  • Prevent accidental human consumption
  • Prevent diversion for use as livestock feed

10
Small Animal Damage Control
Specific Products Commonly Used
Strychnine
Zinc Phosphide
Anticoagulants
Aluminum Phosphide
11
Small Animal Damage Control
Strychnine
ALL ABOVE GROUND USES HAVE BEEN CANCELLED
  • Uses limited to below ground - pocket gophers
    only
  • Acute, single dose toxicant
  • White, bitter tasting powder - Made from seeds
    of the Asian strychnos nux vomica tree

12
Small Animal Damage Control
Strychnine
  • Available only in an alkaloid form
  • Almost insoluble in water
  • Will breakdown if exposed to heat light
  • Other characteristics
  • Is not cumulative
  • Has a slight odor
  • Is not selective
  • Toxic to most animals
  • Rapidly absorbed - effects rapid

13
Small Animal Damage Control
Zinc Phosphide
PRE-BAITING IS NECESSARY!
  • Use restricted to July - December
  • Prozap (HAACO) allows use in WY March 1 - June
    30 (SLN - 24c)
  • Labeled for meadow mice, voles, ground
    squirrels, prairie dogs, various species of rats
    and other rodents.

14
Small Animal Damage Control
Zinc Phosphide
  • Characteristics
  • Heavy, finely ground gray-black powder
  • Strong, pungent, garlic like odor
  • Insoluble in water alcohol
  • Reacts with acids readily
  • Less toxic than strychnine
  • Slowest acting of the commonly used rodenticides

15
Small Animal Damage Control
Anticoagulants
  • Characteristics
  • Reduce clotting ability of blood
  • Death occurs from internal external bleeding
  • Affected animals die quietly
  • Poison of choice in and near cities
  • Little danger to domestic animals
  • Available as dry bait, or water soluble
  • Vitamin K is the antidote

16
Small Animal Damage Control
Aluminum Phosphide
  • Characteristics
  • Registered for control of various burrowing
    rodents (e.g. Prairie dogs)
  • Tablet form
  • Moisture produces phosphine gas
  • Labeled for outdoor use only
  • Rangeland pastures
  • Non-cropland areas

17
Small Animal Damage Control
Gas Cartridges
  • Produces carbon monoxide
  • Unrestricted use product - easy to use
  • Precautions
  • Do not use near buildings or flammable
    materials
  • Carbon Monoxide is odorless, colorless
  • Labeled uses
  • Small Gas Cartridge burrowing rodents
  • Large Gas Cartridge coyotes, skunks

18
Small Animal Damage Control
Vertebrate Pests Commonly Controlled
Prairie Dogs
Porcupines
Pocket Gophers
Moles
Ground Squirrels
Skunks
Bats
Birds
19
Small Animal Damage Control
Prairie Dogs
  • Baiting
  • Zinc Phosphide requires pre-baiting
  • Best when green forage is not available
  • Use one (1) teaspoon of bait/burrow
  • Fumigants
  • Clean-up following bait applications

20
Small Animal Damage Control
Prairie Dogs
  • Precautions
  • Always wear gloves
  • When working with toxicants
  • When handling carcasses - host to plague
    infected fleas
  • Black-Footed Ferret Searches
  • Dependent upon size of treatment area, species
    of prairie dog

21
Small Animal Damage Control
Pocket Gopher
  • General Information
  • Extensive underground burrow system
  • Eat plant roots stems. Girdle trees or clip
    tree roots
  • Mounds are horseshoe shaped
  • Active in winter

22
Small Animal Damage Control
Pocket Gopher
  • Control
  • Most Effective Toxicants and traps
  • 0.5 Strychnine Oats
  • Large or heavily infested areas - use burrow
    builder
  • Hand baiting, fumigation, or trapping for small
    areas

23
Small Animal Damage Control
Ground Squirrels
  • General
  • More destructive than prairie dogs - larger
    numbers range
  • Estivation - tend to live in one place
  • Active year around
  • Host to plague infected fleas

24
Small Animal Damage Control
Ground Squirrels
  • Control
  • Fumigants
  • Gas Cartridges
  • Trapping
  • Toxicants

25
Small Animal Damage Control
Porcupines
  • Classified as a rodent
  • Primarily inhabit forested areas
  • Do not hibernate, rest in same place
  • Damage Girdle pine trees, eat fruits, alfalfa,
    sweet corn
  • Control Trapping and/or shooting

26
Small Animal Damage Control
Moles
  • Classified as a rodent
  • Pest of gardens, lawns, flower beds
  • Rarely surface above ground
  • Most damage caused when digging
  • Voles, white-footed mice, house mice, other
    animals utilize tunnels, cause damage often
    blamed on moles

27
Small Animal Damage Control
Moles
  • Control
  • Exclusion
  • Cultural Re-packing soil, reduce soil
    moisture
  • Repellents Onions/garlic around gardens
  • Toxicants Will not take bait readily
  • Fumigants
  • Trapping Only effective method

28
Small Animal Damage Control
Skunks
  • Member of the weasel family
  • Classified as a predator
  • Plant animal foods - insects preferred
  • Will eat small mammals
  • Classified insectivorous

29
Small Animal Damage Control
Skunks
  • Health risk
  • Rabies
  • Habitat
  • Clearings, pastures, prairies
  • Usually a den - hollow logs, under buildings
  • Dormant during extreme cold
  • Most reports come in early spring and fall

30
Small Animal Damage Control
Skunks
  • Control
  • Preventive control foremost - Seal Openings
  • Trapping - Lethal live traps
  • Shooting
  • Large gas cartridge
  • Toxicants - NONE

31
Small Animal Damage Control
Bats
Most bats are protected varying state or federal
laws
Heres your problem - a bunch of bats in your
chimney!
32
Small Animal Damage Control
Bats
  • Insectivorous
  • Not aggressive, but will bite if handled
  • Health risk rabies encephalitis
  • Control
  • Exclusion (permanent solution)
  • Ultrasonic devices - not effective, some
    attract bats
  • Naphthalene Flakes (Moth balls)
  • Toxicants - NONE

33
Small Animal Damage Control
Bird Control
  • Migratory birds - 50 CFR 21
  • Game Fish Chapter LII Non-game Regulations
  • Statutes define
  • Predacious bird means English sparrow and
    starling
  • May be taken any time during the calendar year
    in Wyoming
  • Legal to destroy nest eggs

34
Small Animal Damage Control
Bird Control
  • Statutes Define
  • Protected bird means migratory birds as
    defined and

protected under federal law
  • Diseases
  • Histoplasmosis
  • Tuberculosis
  • Cholera
  • Parrot Fever

35
Small Animal Damage Control
Bird Control
  • Urban sanitation problems - pigeons, sparrows,
    starlings, and increasingly geese
  • Control
  • Habitat manipulation
  • Aversion
  • Exclusion
  • Trapping baiting

36
Small Animal Damage Control
Bird Control
  • Control - continued
  • Toxicants (Avicides) lethal methods -
    legality?
  • Chemosterilants
  • Nest destruction
  • Poison baits
  • Carcasses picked up
  • Eagles most at risk
  • Contact poisons
  • Toxic perches
  • Surfactant or detergent solutions

37
Small Animal Damage Control
Bird Control
Methods most effective when used intermittently,
in combination with other techniques AND before
birds establish regular feeding habits
38
Small Animal Damage Control
- Diseases - Highest Exposure Risk
Plague
Rabies
Hantavirus
39
Small Animal Damage Control
Plague
  • Bacteria Yersinia Pestis
  • First discovered in Yellowstone Nat. Park - 1934
  • Predominant in prairie dog populations
  • Causes sudden, unexplained die-offs
  • Not prevalent in big game populations
  • Does exist in feline, canine, squirrel, rabbit,
    chipmunk and other commensal rodent populations

40
Small Animal Damage Control
Plague
  • Human contact plague in 3 ways
  • Flea bite
  • Unprotected contact
  • Airborne particles
  • Flea associated with human plague does not
    exist in Wyoming
  • Rodent flea though will feed on humans if the
    opportunity arises

41
Small Animal Damage Control
Plague
  • Last 80 years, all cases of respiratory
    (pneumonic) plague have been contracted from
    house cats
  • Chances of contracting plague are small
  • Treatable if caught in time
  • Symptoms similar to flu
  • Wear impervious gloves (rubber latex) when
    skinning wild animals
  • Most at risk are hunters trappers

42
Small Animal Damage Control
Plague
  • Three types of plague
  • Bubonic - Flea bite
  • Septicemic - Fluids from infected animal
  • Pneumonic - Secondary/Respiratory droplets
  • Control of plague vector
  • Sevin Dust

43
Small Animal Damage Control
Rabies
  • People at high risk can be vaccinated
  • Any animal is capable of contracting, carrying,
    and transmitting
  • Rabies can be latent
  • Occurs most often in spring and fall
  • Virus remains active even if frozen
  • Death is not always probable

44
Small Animal Damage Control
Rabies
  • Animals with rabies or suspected cases
  • Cage the animal, notify public health officer
  • A rabid dog may
  • Bite other animals or moving objects
  • Seizures, muscle incoordination
  • Die by progressive paralysis

45
Small Animal Damage Control
Rabies
  • Bats with rabies may be controlled with
    tracking powders
  • Skunks - for testing
  • Shoot in body, ship head to State Vet Lab
  • Rabies can be contracted through open wounds or
    breaks in the skin
  • Wear impervious gloves when skinning wild
    animals

46
Small Animal Damage Control
Hantavirus
  • Deer mouse is primary carrier
  • Transmitted by
  • Direct contact with mice
  • Inhaling airborne particles
  • No known person to person transmission
  • Infection in cats is rare
  • Similar virus to hemorrhagic fever - no known
    cure

47
Small Animal Damage Control
Hantavirus
  • Causes flu-like symptoms
  • Safety Precautions
  • Controlling rodents, cleaning areas
  • Wet mop
  • Wear rubber or latex gloves
  • Wear a HEPA filter - Not paper
  • Eliminate compatible environment
  • Disinfection and cleaning bleach

48
Small Animal Damage Control
Summary
  • More rodent predator information

Dept. Of Agriculture http//wyagric.state.wy.us/t
echserv/tsindex.html Control Information http//w
ildlifedamage.unl.edu/
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