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House
Mouse
The
house mouse is the most successful rodent in adapting to life with
people. It's found almost everywhere people are, feeding on human
food, sheltering in human structures and reproducing at a rapid
rate. The house mouse is the most troublesome and economically important
vertebrate pest, contaminating millions of dollars worth of food,
damaging property and causing electrical fires with its constant
gnawing. Mice may enter a building from the outside and spread through
a structure along pipes, cables and ducts. Although large numbers
can build up in food service areas or trash rooms, one or a few
mice can survive practically anywhere.
Many
control failures against house mice are due to a lack of understanding
of mouse biology and habits. A pair of mice can produce 50 offspring
in one year. Because they seek food over a range of only 10 to 30
feet, traps, glue boards and bait must be placed close to the nest
to be effective. Remember that good inspections are critical for
successful mouse control.
Inspection
Sounds - Sounds are common at night where large numbers of
mice are present; listen for squeaks, scrambling and sounds of gnawing.
Droppings
- A house mouse produces many droppings per day; mouse droppings
are frequently the first evidence that mice are present. However,
be aware that large cockroaches and bats may produce droppings similar
to house mice. Look along runways, by food near shelters and in
other places mice may frequent.
Urine
- House mice occasionally make small mounds known as "urinating
pillars." These consist of a combination of grease, urine and dirt
and may become quite conspicuous. Look for many small drops of urine
using a blacklight. Urine stains will fluoresce under ultraviolet
light. (Mouse urine spots are not as easy to detect as those made
by rats.)
Grease
marks - Like rats, mice produce greasy smears where dirt and
oil from their fur mark pipes and beams.
Runways
- Most mouse runways are indistinct trails free of dust and are
not readily detectable.
Tracks
- Look for footprints or tail marks on dusty surfaces or on
mud; use a nontoxic tracking dust (like talc) to help locate mice
within buildings.
Gnawing
damage - Newly-gnawed areas on wood are light in color, turning
darker with age. Look for small tooth marks and enlarged cracks
beneath doors. Mice make wood chips with a consistency like coarse
sawdust around baseboards, doors, basement windows and frames and
kitchen cabinets.
Visual
sightings - Mice are often active in daylight and this may not
indicate a high population (as it does with rats). Use a powerful
flashlight or spotlight at night to confirm mouse presence.
Nest
Sites - Inspect garages, attics, basements, closets and other
storage places for evidence of nests. Be alert to fine shredded
paper or similar materials; these are common nest-building materials.
Mouse
Odors - Mice produce a characteristic musky odor.
Estimating
Numbers of Mice
The number of mice observed or food consumed is not reliable as
a census technique with mice. Unlike rats (which may travel widely
within a building leaving tracks on many patches of dust) mice do
not range widely.
- Read
natural signs such as droppings, urine stains, tracks and damage.
- Make
nontoxic tracking patches of talc at 20- to 30-foot intervals
throughout a building. The more tracks seen in each patch and
the more patches showing tracks, the larger the population is.
The percentage of patches showing tracks will reflect the extent
of the local infestation.
- Tracking
patches are also an excellent means to evaluate a control operation.
Compare the number of tracks or patches with mouse tracks before
and after a control program.
Control
and Management
Control and prevention of mice is a three-part process, which
includes sanitation, mouse-proofing and population reduction with
traps or baits. Sanitation and mouse-proofing will help prevent
mice from entering buildings. When a mouse population already
exists, some kind of lethal control is necessary. Otherwise, mice,
which reproduce rapidly and can find food almost anywhere, will
continue to be a problem.
Habitat
and Harborage Reduction
Sanitation - Good sanitation makes it easier to detect
signs of mouse infestation. It also increases the effectiveness
of baits and traps by reducing available food. However, the best
sanitation will not eliminate mice; they require very little space
and small amounts of food to survive and reproduce.
- Store
bulk foods in mouse-proof containers or rooms. In storerooms,
stack packaged foods in orderly rows on pallets so that they
can be inspected easily. A family of mice can live in a pallet
of food without ever having to leave the immediate area.
- Keep
stored materials away from walls and off the floor. A 12-18
inch yellow or white painted band next to the wall in storage
areas permits easier detection of mouse droppings. This band
and the areas around pallets should be swept often so that new
droppings can be detected quickly.
Mouse-Proofing
- Completely mouse-proofing a building is difficult because mice
are reported to be able to squeeze through an opening as little
as 1/4 inch high. To mouse-proof a building:
- Seal
large holes to limit the movement of mice into and through a
building.
- Plug
holes in foundation walls with steel wool or copper mesh.
- Caulk
and fit doors and windows tightly.
- Seal
holes around pipes, utility lines, vents, etc., to make it difficult
for mice to move in and out of wall and ceiling voids. (This
limits mice to a smaller area and may make snap traps and glue
boards more effective.)
- Do
not prop open kitchen doors; install screen doors wherever possible.
Traps
Snap
Traps If used correctly, snap traps are very effective in
controlling mice. They must be set in the right places, in high
numbers and in the right position or mice will miss them entirely.
Always place traps in areas that are inaccessible to students.
Here are some tips to keep in mind when trapping mice:
- Remember
that mice rarely go further than 30 feet from the nest, only
10 feet in most cases. If mice are sighted throughout a building,
it means that there are many locations where you will have to
set traps. Place snap traps not only wherever you see obvious
signs of mice, but also in a three-dimensional sphere about
ten feet in diameter around those signs. (Mice are good climbers.)
- Mice
can be living above their main food supply in suspended ceilings,
attics, inside vertical pipe runs and on top of walk-in coolers.
Or they can be below, in floor voids, crawl spaces, or under
coolers or other equipment.
- The
best sites are those with large numbers of droppings since that
means the mice are spending a lot of time there. Other good
sites are along walls, behind objects, and in dark corners,
particularly where runways narrow down, funneling the mice into
a limited area.
- Successful
trapping requires good mouse baits. Peanut butter, bacon, cereal
and nuts are attractive to mice. Food baits must be fresh to
be effective. Another bait is a cotton ball, which the female
mice like to use for nest material. It must be tied securely
to the trigger.
- Two
or more traps placed next to each other will capture more mice
than single traps.
- Probably
the biggest mistake made in mouse trapping is not using enough
traps. Use enough to quickly eliminate the mice.
- Great
care must be taken to place traps out of the public view and
to check them regularly.
- Mice
can carry several diseases, so technicians should wash their
hands after handling traps or other items that come in contact
with mouse urine and feces. Use disposable latex gloves or tongs
to handle dead mice. A bleach/water solution of at least three
tablespoons household beach per gallon can be used to sanitize
traps.
Multiple-Catch
Traps
Multiple-catch mouse traps catch up to 15 mice without being reset.
Some brands are called "windup" traps; the windup mechanism kicks
mice into the trap. Others use a treadle door. Live mice must
be humanely killed.
Mice are curious and like to investigate new things. They enter
the small entrance hole in the trap without hesitation. Odor plays
a role too; traps that smell "mousy" catch more mice. Place a
small dab of peanut butter inside the tunnel entrance to improve
the catch.
- Mice
are captured alive but may die in a day or two; dead mice may
cause odors or attract insects. Some traps have a clear plastic
end plate or lid so you can see if any have been captured.
- Check
traps frequently; mice can get hung up in the mechanism and
render the trap inoperative.
- Place
the traps directly against a wall or object with the opening
parallel to the runway, or point the tunnel hole toward the
wall, leaving one or two inches of space between the trap and
the wall.
- If
mice are active, place many traps 6-10 feet apart. After the
mouse infestation is eliminated, maintenance traps may be placed
where mice have been numerous before. Additionally, traps can
also be placed at potential entry points such as storerooms,
loading docks, near utility lines and at doorways.
Glue
Boards
Glue boards can be effective when other methods have failed against
a "bait-shy" mouse or when food is abundant. As with other traps,
placement is the key. Locations that are good for other types
of traps are good sites for glue boards.
- Place
glue boards in hidden locations away from areas where staff
can view them. (One method is to place the glue board inside
a tamper-resistant bait station.)
- Use
the larger "rat-size" glue boards, which are more difficult
for mice to escape from.
- Do
not put glue boards directly above food products or in food
preparation areas.
- Set
glue boards lengthwise and flush against a wall, box, or other
object that edges a runway.
- Move
objects around; create new, narrow runways six inches wide to
increase the effectiveness of glue boards.
- Put
peanut butter or a cotton ball in the center of the board.
- Place
the glue boards 5 to 10 feet apart in infested areas (closer
if the population is large).
- If
no mice are captured in three days, move the boards to new locations.
- If
a trapped mouse is alive, kill it humanely before disposal.
Replace the boards if they become covered with dust. Glue boards
do not work well in cold areas.
Rodenticides
"Building out" mice and trapping are the most effective control
methods. Rodent baits should be used only in emergency situations
to supplement these methods. If there is a repeated need to use
baits, it is likely that sanitation and mouse-proofing should
be improved. Remember that rodent baits are poisons. Additionally,
use of baits in schools represents special problems because of
incidents where students have moved or tampered with rodent baits.
In schools, baits should be used only after nonchemical control
measures have been instituted.
Children, pets, wildlife and domestic animals must be protected
by putting the bait in tamper-resistant bait boxes in inaccessible
locations. Using baits alone will not provide long-term control
of mice.
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