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Location: 2242 Carroll Rd, Fort Wayne, IN 46818 • Hours: 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. and 1 to 4:30 p.m., Monday - Friday
Meet the Staff: Tom McCue, REHS, Asst. Director; Francis Koch, Env.Technician; Pat De Haven, Secretary; Seasonal Mosquito Technicians
Rats & Mice - Control
Controlling rats and mice is more than just plugging entry holes, setting traps, and putting out poison bait. The best control is to take away available food, water, and shelter.
Sanitation
The first step is a cleanup program. Rats and mice find shelter under old lumber piles and stacked firewood (should be stored 18 inches off the ground), piles of old papers, boxes, bags, broken-down sheds, trash dumps, high weeds and abandoned vehicles. All such areas must be eliminated or corrected. Any control program without environmental improvement will be ineffective. These rodents can rapidly restore their original population levels due to their high birth rate.
Interior sanitation also needs to occur. Once rats or mice are in your house, their population levels will increase if there is available food and water. Remember rats will eat about anything. If there is a cockroach problem, rats or mice can feed on the insects. Clean up food crumbs and fix water leaks.
Rodentproofing
This means stopping the movement of rats and mice into buildings or other areas where they are not wanted. Rats can squeeze through a hole the size of a quarter; mice can move through a hole the size of a dime. Favorite entranceways are poorly fitting doors and windows, holes around lead-in pipes and wires, dryer vents, joints between building foundations and walls, cracked siding, and unscreened doorways. All such openings should be closed using sheet metal, hardware cloth or cement. Doors and windows should be adjusted to close tightly. It is also important to have tight-fitting covers on floor drains.
Population Reduction
There are five methods generally used for population reduction: trapping, glue boards, burrow fumigation, tracking powders, and oral toxicants.
- Trapping is a practical way of removing rats and mice, especially where poisons might be hazardous and where odors from dead animals would be objectionable. The most effective and versatile trap is the wooden-based snap trap.
- Glue boards involve the use of a non-toxic sticky substance on heavy squares of cardboard. They are placed in active runways. When the animals become trapped, they are killed and the board is thrown in the trash. These are well-suited for restaurants and food-handling establishments.
- There are several chemicals federally-registered for use as fumigants against commensal rodents. They should never be used where there is danger of people or non-target animals coming in contact with the gas. For that reason, most fumigants can only be used by professional pest control operators.
- A tracking powder is effective when food is plentiful. They work by having the rodent come into contact with it; then the rat or mouse cleans itself; and, the rodent ingests the poison. Tracking powders should never be used in areas where there is any danger of the powder coming in contact with food or surfaces where food is prepared.
- There are two general types of oral poisons: single and multiple doses. Killing success with single dose poisons depends on the animal consuming a lethal amount at one meal. Multiple dose poisons have a lower concentration of toxicant. They rely on several days of consecutive feeding. No toxic bait is 100% effective. Trapping is necessary for every last rodent to be removed. Also, placement of bait inside a structure can cause several problems. Children or pets may eat the bait and have adverse reactions. Rats and mice that eat the bait may die in a wall void or other unreachable areas and produce a decomposing odor.
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH RODENT BAIT POLICY
The Vector Control & Environmental Services Division of the Fort Wayne - Allen County Department of Health places bait around a residential structure to eliminate rats as needed to remove potential public health threats. Bait is placed in burrows, under porches or in secure bait stations. The bait is not to be touched by the occupant/property owner as this is unsafe and may decrease the effectiveness of the Department's efforts to eliminate the rats on the property. The Department cannot provide bait to the public, due to Federal law.
Employees will not place bait inside the living areas of a structure. It is the employee's discretion to bait in attics, utility basements, crawl spaces, and garages depending on the situation. For safety reasons, employees will not climb into attics and/or crawl spaces to place bait.
CLEANING UP RODENT DROPPINGS AND URINE
If there is a large amount of droppings and urine to clean up, take great care because rodent-borne disease could be present.
- Open windows for ventilation.
- Wear gloves.
- If a large amount of droppings and urine are present, wear a N-95 respirator mask.
- Spray the droppings and urine with a disinfectant or bleach solution (1 part bleach per 10 parts water).
- Wipe up with paper towels. Throw the towels into the trash.
- Spray the disinfectant or bleach solution on to the surface and wipe or mop.
- CDC Guidelines on Cleaning
IF YOU THINK YOU HAVE A PROBLEM...
The Division will provide a free inspection of your residential property. When necessary, toxic baits will be placed outside the structure, at no charge. The employees will recheck your property every 7 - 14 days until the infestation is eliminated. Please call us at 260 449-7459 to schedule an inspection.
HELPFUL INFORMATION
- Rodent Brochure
- Seal Up! Trap Up! Clean Up!
- Rodent-proofing Your Home
- Rats and Mice
- Purchasing a Healthy Pet Rodent
- Integrated Pest Management
More Articles: General Information • FAQ • Animal Bites & Rabies • Bed Bugs • Children's Environmental Health Protection • Cockroaches • Indoor Air Quality • Meth Labs • Mold • Mosquitoes • Mosquitoes - Biology • Mosquitoes - Diseases • Mosquitoes - Prevention & Control • Pests & Other Vectors • Radon • Rats & Mice - Biology & Diseases • Ticks • Unsanitary Conditions • Unwanted Refrigerators & Freezers • Integrated Pest Management
An average-sized rat can squeeze through a hole the size of a quarter, while a mouse can squeeze through dime-sized holes. Cockroaches can squeeze into cracks and crevices as thin as a quarter.
- Allen County Government
- Allen County Solid Waste District
- Allen County-Purdue University Extension Service
- City of Fort Wayne
- City of New Haven
- Indiana Board of Animal Health
- Indiana Department of Environmental Management
- Indiana Department of Homeland Security
- Indiana State Chemist's Office
- Indiana State Department of Health
- Indiana Environmental Health Association
- Indiana Public Health Association
- Indiana Vector Control Association
- American Mosquito Control Association
- Purdue University Entomology Extension
- Purdue University Public Health Entomology
- U.S. Centers for Disease Control & Prevention
- U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
- U.S. Housing and Urban Development
- World Health Organization
