
Control Commensal Rodents In
Poultry Houses
This publication is
primarily for poultry farmers and service persons trying to control rats
and mice in poultry houses. However, much of the information may also
be applied in controlling rats and mice in other poultry facilities.
You can have good rat
and mouse control by using properly selected rodenticides and baits. Once
you select and properly mix the bait, proper placement and care to keep
the bait fresh and clean are important.
A good rat and mouse
control program requires some effort and expense, especially at first.
Many poultry farmers will be willing to spend the time and money to begin
and maintain good control, while others will not.
Commensal Rodents
Rats make up the largest
single group of mammals on earth--one-third of the earth's total mammal
population.
Several kinds of rats
and mice are found in Mississippi. However, only the Norway rat, the roof
rat, and the house mouse are considered important pests around farms and
homes. They are referred to as "commensal rodents" because of their intimate
relationships with humans.
The Norway Rat
The Norway rat is slightly
larger than the roof rat and is primarily a burrowing animal but can climb
when necessary. It prefers to live in a burrow 8 to 18 inches below ground.
It is sometimes called the sewer rat, house rat, wharf rat, or barn rat.
The Roof Rat
The roof rat is a good
climber and seldom burrows in the ground. It lives above ground in attics,
between walls, in cabinets and shelves, and in barn lofts. The roof rat,
compared to the Norway rat, has a more slender, streamlined body, more
pointed nose, ears and eyes, and its tail is longer than its body.
Other than the differences
listed, the Norway and roof rats are similar. Both are good swimmers;
because their front incisor teeth grow an average of 5 inches a year,
they gnaw almost constantly to keep them worn down. They can fall 50 feet
without serious harm. They usually feed twice at night just after dark
and just before dawn. They usually stay within a 100-foot radius if food
and water are available but have been known to move almost a mile a day
in search of plentiful water and shelter. Adult rats eat about 1 ounce
of food and 1.5 ounces of water per day. Without food, weakness begins
after about 3 days, but without water, weakness begins in 1 to 2 days.
When weakness begins from lack of food or water, they begin to move elsewhere.
Overpopulation also causes some rats to seek new locations.
Reproduction of Rats
Rats breed at 3 to
4 months of age and probably continue until about 18 months old. Gestation
is 21 to 25 days. The young are weaned at 3 weeks old, often just before
the arrival of another litter. A female can breed only one day after giving
birth. If fertilization does not occur, she will come into heat about
every 5 days. A female averages six litters per year, with nine young
per litter. However, under ideal conditions, litters may contain 20 young,
and 14 litters have been recorded during one year. The babies from one
pair of rats would be more than 3.5 million in 3 years under ideal conditions
and ignoring the death rate. In natural conditions, however, many die,
but in a year, as many as 60 to 70 offspring from one female may mature.
Breeding is greatest in spring and fall, drops some in summer, and drops
substantially in winter.
The House Mouse
The common house mouse
depends less on humans than rats do. It commonly inhabits grassy fields
and cultivated grain crops and adapts well to living away from humans.
For example, some have been captured on open tundra in Alaska, miles away
from human settlements. On the other hand, they adapt well to living with
humans, as indicated by a report of their living 1,800 feet below ground
in a coal mine, probably feeding on lunch scraps of the miners.
The house mouse has
a small range. Home range tends to be from a few feet up to 25 feet. This
is important to know when determining the frequency and distance to place
poison bait or traps. Mice, unlike rats, show almost no fear of new objects
placed in their ranges.
Rats and mice have
poor vision. Rats see clearly only up to about 2 feet and mice even less--6
inches. However, they can detect movement beyond their clear-vision range.
Their activity patterns are based on their keen senses of smell, taste,
hearing, and touch.
Reproduction of the House Mouse
Reproduction of the
house mouse is similar to rats. The average gestation is 20 days, and
litter size is about six, with 6 to 10 litters per breeding life of the
female.
Diseases
Rats and Mice Spread
Rats are known to spread
35 diseases to humans and animals. Some human diseases rats spread are
Salmonellosis, rabies, tularemia, leptospirosis, amoebic dysentery, typhus,
jaundice, trichinosis, rickettsialpox, lymphocytic choriomeningitis, ray
fungus, and ringworm. Also, they transport and host ectoparasites, especially
mites. Mites living temporarily on rats and miice in their nests and burrow
can, following treatment of the house and birds for mites, quickly reinfest
the premises with mites. When you sell birds on mite-infested farms, migrating
rodents can transport mites to adjacent farms. Rats can transport 18 different
kinds of mites, lice, fleas, and ticks.
When you market poultry
at the end of a production cycle and clean the poultry house, rats tend
to migrate to other places where they can get feed and water. There are
cases, of course, where feed is left in the feeders or spilled around
feed bins and water remains available in the house or in a stream or pond
nearby during cleanout time. Then, most of the rats will not move elsewhere.
But it is believed a lot of rats do migrate between poultry farms during
cleanout or down time, and the rats may spread some poultry diseases and
ectoparasites as they travel.
Using disinfecting
foot pans for poultry caretakers and service persons is good and should
be encouraged, as should other sanitation measures, but you should remember
migrating rats do not use disinfecting foot pans when they enter and exit
the house. Also remember that rats, in most cases, get directly in a feed
trough to feed, and they drink directly from the waterer the chickens
use. Therefore, rats can be an ideal means of transporting diseases from
farm to farm.
Estimating Your Rat and Mouse
Population
Use this thumb rule
to determine your rat population. If you never see rats but see signs
of them, there are from 1 to 100 on the premises. If you see them occasionally
at night, there are 100 to 500. Occasional daytime and numerous night
sightings indicate 400 to 1,000. Seeing several in the daytime may indicate
a presence of as many as 5,000. When one farmer sold his laying flock
he decided to get rid of the few rats in his hen house. The score at the
end of his extermination program was 1,800 dead rats.
Controlling Rat and Mouse Populations
The best way to control
rats and mice is to close all access routes into buildings, but this is
difficult to do in poultry houses. The second best control method is to
remove all shelter, food, and water, which again, poultry farmers are
not able to do. That leaves using one or a combination of poisoning, trapping,
or using cats.
Using Cats
Some poultry people
consider cats a nuisance and possible hosts for disease. However, when
properly managed, cats do control mice in cage laying houses but cannot
be relied upon to reduce rat populations severely, although they will
restrict a population buildup. Cats work best when they are not permitted
to leave the house. During flock changes it is best to catch and confine
the cats until the new flock is in place.
Cats should be kept
working. Use one cat per 5,000 laying birds, up to a total of five cats
per house. More than five cats per house may reduce hunting activity.
Young (less than 5 years old) female cats make the best hunters. Males
only occasionally hunt well.
Cats should be well
fed and watered to maintain good vigor. They do not have to be starved
to cause them to hunt mice. A bowl kept supplied with a dry commercial
cat food and fresh water nearby is a good feeding program.
Provide a litter box
with commercial litter, sand, or sandy soil and an open-topped sleeping
box with some sort of soft bedding. Cats kept confined to poultry houses
seldom experience difficulty with diseases.
Trapping
Trapping is a practical
way to remove rats and mice on relatively small poultry farms, but in
commercial operations you need too many traps and it takes too much attention
to remove dead rats and rebait the traps to be practical.
If you use traps, many
foods make good baits--peanut butter, meat of nuts, doughnuts, cake, fresh
crisp-fried bacon, cheese, raisins, strawberry jam, milk chocolate, apples,
gumdrops, prunes, and pineapple.
Enlarging the trap
trigger with cardboard makes it more effective. Place the traps across
or near paths rats or mice normally use. Both rats and mice, because of
their poor eyesight and for protection, like to run close to walls. Because
mice travel only short distances, set traps every 10 feet. With rats,
place traps every 25 to 50 feet.
Rats and mice are accustomed
to human odors. Therefore, you don't need to boil or handle traps with
gloves. Remove dead animals from the traps regularly.
Using a Rodenticide
Rodenticides are usually
mixed with some bait material or materials. Selecting the right bait is
important, especially where a plentiful supply of good feed is available,
as in poultry houses. Also, the Norway and roof rats and the mouse each
have bait preferences. Therefore, it is important to know which of these
rodents you plan to poison so you can choose the right bait material.
Remember: If you use rodent control for rats only, mice will multiply
rapidly once the rat population is under control. (The mice do not have
to compete with the rats.)
Using Antifertility Agents
Research is being conducted
to develop chemosterilants (antifertility agents) for rats and mice. Once
developed and marketed, these drugs will probably be a followup to a rodenticide.
Using Chemical and Mechanical
Repellents
Chemical and mechanical
rat and mouse repellents have been tried, but neither seems to control
rats and mice in and around poultry facilities.
Bait Preferences and Care
House Mouse
House mice prefer canary
seed (bird seed), prunes, pineapple, jelly beans, peanut butter, chopped
apples, corn, wheat, oatmeal, milo, doughnuts, cookies, and sweet chocolate
candy. They also like the juices of prunes and pineapple.
House mice are nibblers
and like to try new foods. Using baits different from the usual food source
often works well on mice, with two or three choices of baits in small
amounts, instead of using more of one bait.
Roof Rat
The roof rat is a finicky
eater, wary of everything new in its environment, including food, and
does not readily accept meat or fish. The roof rat likes cereal grains,
chopped apples, sweetpotatoes, melons, prunes, pineapple, cookies, doughnuts,
sweet chocolate candy, peanut butter, and tomatoes.
Norway Rat
Norway rats readily
accept fresh meat and fish. They usually prefer a bait higher in protein
and fat than their normal diets. Also, they like peanut butter, sweet
chocolate candy, lettuce, tomatoes, apples, carrots, bananas, corn, milo,
wheat, and doughnuts. Norway rats are gluttons and accept a greater variety
of baits than do roof rats. Also, they are not as wary about new objects
or food in their territory as is the roof rat. This makes them a little
easier to bait and trap.
Many ingredients are
added to bait mixtures to enhance the bait's acceptance by rats and mice,
but about the only truly effective, readily available enhancers are 5
percent sugar, bacon drippings, and peanut or corn oil added to the bait
mixture. Five percent sugar and 5 percent oil may be added.
As you can see, you
can use a variety of baits with rodenticides. The important thing to remember
with any bait material is that baits and bait containers must be fresh
and clean for best acceptance. Thinking that rats and mice prefer spoiled,
unclean food is false. The truth is, they are actually little different
from other mammals in that they prefer fresh, clean food.
Rats and mice move
in search of food before eating stale, sour, moldy, or feces and urine-contaminated
food. It is estimated rats and mice eliminate 80 percent of their daily
feces and urine waste as they are feeding. Therefore, you should present
baits to them in a manner that tends to decrease rat or mouse contamination.
Because of this, bait stations that dispense anticoagulant-type poison
bait as it is being eaten are normally better than an open-top bait container
that lets rats and mice contaminate the bait with their body wastes. Shallow
trays, dishes, and boards may work well for quick-kill bait, since it
should be removed and replaced every day or two anyway.
Choosing a Bait or Bait Mixture
When considering which
bait or bait mixture to use with poisons in an occupied poultry house,
consider that rodents already have an excellent bait (chicken feed) readily
available. Therefore, it is sometimes difficult to find just the right
bait material to use, one that will be more acceptable than the chicken
feed. Prebait testing may be necessary.
If you mix poisons
with such bait materials as ground meat or fish, peanut butter, ground
prunes, or pineapple, you can spread the mixture (may need to add a little
water) on thin slices of bread and Ritz or graham crackers for distribution.
It is usually best to divide the material into approximately ½-inch
to 1-inch pieces and make numerous placings over the area instead of using
larger pieces and fewer placings.
Suggested Dry and Water Bait
Mixtures
Dry Bait Mixtures
-- These are some dry bait mixtures rats and mice accept: (Note:
With each mixture listed, reduce percentage level of the major ingredient
to allow adding the proper level of rodenticide.)
- A good, high protein
bait mixture is 60 percent poultry offal meal, 5 percent sugar, and
35 percent poultry mash. (Reduce poultry offal meal to allow for rodenticide.)
This is a good Norway rat bait, since they prefer high protein baits.
Roof rats and mice may also accept it. Because of its high protein content,
this mixture is suggested for poultry houses with or without chickens
in them.
- Mix 90 percent poultry
mash, 5 percent sugar, and 5 percent peanut or corn oil. (Reduce poultry
mash to allow for rodenticide.) Rats and mice should accept this mixture.
It is more effective just after you remove chickens and feed from the
house.
- Canary grass seed
(80 percent), 10 percent poultry mash, 5 percent sugar, and 5 percent
peanut or corn oil. (Reduce canary grass seed to allow for rodenticide.)
This mixture is probably best for mice. Since rats seldom accept baits
mixed with strychnine, this bait mixture is often used with strychnine
to treat for mice only.
- Corn meal (90 percent),
5 percent sugar, and 5 percent peanut or corn oil. (Reduce corn meal
to allow for rodenticide.) Both rats and mice will accept this bait,
but acceptance may be limited where poultry feed is available for the
rats and mice. Acceptance of this bait is usually best when used in
the absence of poultry feeds.
- Use the same mixture
as in number 4 bait except substitute cracked corn, soybean meal, milo,
rolled oats, wheat, or a mixture of these for cornmeal. Because soybean
meal has a higher protein content, rats may prefer soybean meal to cornmeal,
while mice may prefer cornmeal or a mixture.
- Poultry feed (mash
or pellets) 100 percent. (Reduce level of poultry feed to allow for
rodenticide.) You may use this bait for both rats and mice. Acceptance
will be good if you use it just after you remove chickens and feed.
Otherwise, rats and mice pass by the bait stations and go to the fresher,
less contaminated feed in the feeder lines and pans.
Water baits
are effective for rat control in certain situations, and some rodenticides
(quick kill and anticoagulants) are sold in water soluble form. Water
baiting works best for rat control where water has been available but
is unavailable at the time of poisoning. Such a situation can exist just
after you have removed the chickens from a poultry house and have cut
off and drained all the waterers.
Chick drinkers
make good water bait dispensers. Clean well after each use. You may use
water bait poisoning along with feed bait poisoning for a more effective
total population kill.
You may improve rodent
acceptance by adding sugar to the water at the rate of 5 percent. In addition,
you may add 5 percent prune, pineapple, apple, or grape juice to help
increase acceptance. If you add sugar, use unsweetened juice. Since mice
can live on little water, water baiting is normally more effective with
rats because they need moderate amounts of water daily. However, mice
will accept water baits reasonably well when you add sugar and juice.
Establishing Bait Stations
When dispensing poison
bait or establishing bait stations, consider these points:
- Because rats and
mice have poor eyesight, they tend to run beside walls or other stationary
objects and use their keen sense of touch in their whiskers and the
guard hairs on their bodies to help guide them. These sensitive hairs
help them travel in the dark, in their burrows, and in search of food
and water. They do not often leave their established pathways unless
the environment or food and water supplies change.
- Neither rats nor
mice travel any farther than necessary to reach food and water.
- Place baits where
rats and mice live and travel--not scattered at random or just where
placement is convenient.
- Rats are social
animals and, within the same species, will use the same food, water
source, and runways--and might even nest close together. They range,
if necessary, as far as 150 feet to get food and water but prefer to
travel much shorter distances if food and water are available. Therefore,
you should put rat baits every 25 feet.
The house mouse, however,
is a "loner." In each territory there are one or more females, food, and
shelter. The male mouse does not willingly share his territory with another
adult male mouse. Therefore, you can control mice only by many bait placements--at
least one in each territory. A territory is usually not more than a 10-foot
× 10-foot area. Some mice, for example, spend their entire lives
in a pallet of feed. Mice require very little water and get much of what
they do need from foodstuff, which aids their being able to occupy such
a relatively small space. Place baits for mice 10 feet apart.
Test
Baiting
Test baiting determines
what baits rats or mice prefer before you distribute a poisoned bait.
You should not test more than three types of bait at the same time. Then
use the most readily accepted bait during pretesting with a toxicant.
Since mice prefer to nibble and readily try different foods, test baiting
for mice is usually not necessary.
Prebaiting
Prebaiting is the exposure
of unpoisoned bait for two to six nights before using poisoned bait. It
accustoms rats to feeding on a certain food at a certain place each night.
Prebaiting helps overcome the rats' natural reactions to avoid new foods
and bait shyness in previously poisoned (sublethal dose) rats. Prebaiting
may, to some extent, be a part of a test baiting program. Also, you may
prebait to help determine how much and where poisoned bait is needed.
After 2 days move unused bait stations near stations that are being used.
Amount
of Poison Bait To Dispense
When you dispense poisoned
baits, place enough bait to feed all rodents present. Otherwise, some
animals will receive just enough of the bait to make them sick. Then they
become bait shy.
The amount of poison
bait needed depends on the rodent species, the size of the infestation,
and the toxicant used. Since each location contains so many variables,
prebaiting and test baiting are the best ways to determine what bait to
use, how much bait to use, and where to place it.
Continued re-use of
the same bait and rodenticide in the same location generally results in
decreased acceptance, bait shyness, and poor control. Baits and rodenticides
should, therefore, be rotated periodically.
Treat
for Rats, Mice, or Both
It is not uncommon
to find rats and mice living in the same area. However, it is less common
to find Norway and roof rats occupying the same area. The Norway rat is
larger and more aggressive and can drive away roof rats.
In cases where rat
populations have been drastically reduced by poisoning or some other method,
mice will often move in and rapidly increase in numbers.
Selecting and Mixing Rodenticides
and Bait Materials
Rodenticide
Sources
Many commercially prepared
bait and poison mixtures are available. A list of manufacturers and distributors,
consisting of the companies that responded to a request for their product
information, is available by writing to Dr. Tom Smith, Cooperative Extension
Service, Mississippi State, MS 39762. Many of the companies listed also
market rodenticides in concentrate form for use in mixing with a selected
bait.
Mixing
Baits and Poisons
If you mix at the farm,
use reasonable safety precautions. As the toxicity of the rodenticide
increases, so should the safety precautions. Wear a respirator to prevent
inhaling poison laden dust particles resulting from mixing. None of the
commonly used rodenticides will be absorbed through the skin (except through
cuts) but gloves are still recommended.
You can mix small lots
of bait in a container with a large spoon or paddle or by agitating it
inside a plastic or heavy paper bag. Larger lots (up to 10 pounds) are
more easily and better mixed with a hand-held electric mixer or with a
mixing device attached to an electric drill. Whichever method you use,
mix thoroughly. Check the label for ration and mixing instructions.
Poisoned baits should
always be mixed and placed in clean containers. Scents picked up by the
bait from unclean containers can reduce bait acceptance by rats and mice--especially
roof rats. After mixing, be careful to clean all mixing utensils thoroughly.
Placing Quick-Kill Poisons
Broiler
House
In broiler houses the
best time to use quick-kill poisons is the first day or two after you
remove the chickens. After selecting a quick-kill poison (and bait if
mixing is needed), the important thing is deciding where to place it.
Since rats and mice are accustomed to eating out of the feeder line, the
best place to distribute poisoned bait is in or under the feeder line,
assuming, of course, you remove the birds from the house before beginning
poisoning. Rats and mice tend to return to where they have been feeding
and are more wary of anything new. They are more likely to accept the
poisoned bait if it is near their customary feeding spots.
Let the birds clean
up most of the feed in the trough before you move them from the house.
The morning after moving the birds, lower the feeders back in place and
clean the remaining feed from the troughs. Also clean the feed bin or
any place where rats and mice can get feed. Put some water troughs back
in place with water in them. Place the bait on bread, crackers, shallow
cups, egg cartons, cardboard, or similar appropriate station material
and locate in or under the feeder line. Also put bait in areas you know
rats and mice use, such as around feed bins and along runways. Use quick-kill
baits in this way for 2 or 3 days. Remember to change baits often to keep
them fresh. After the first or second day, move some of the unused stations
near those most frequented by rats and mice. The reason for poisoning
the day after the chickens are moved is to kill the rats or mice while
their feed supply is limited and before they locate other sources of feed
and water.
Rats and mice that
eat nondeadly doses of the quick-kill poisons become wary of accepting
the same poison again. Because of this, using the same type quick-kill
poison sooner than 3 months after initial use will reduce its effectiveness.
Changing both the bait material and quick-kill poison encourages rats
and mice to accept the poison at more frequent time intervals. By alternating
baits and poisons, you can use quick-kill poisons at 2- to 3-month intervals
for best results. Be sure to remove all unused, unprotected poisoned bait
from the poultry house before replacing the chickens.
Cage
Laying House
In occupied cage laying
houses, place quick-kill poison baits on concrete walkways underneath
feeder lines. Rats and mice are used to eating spilled feed from these
areas. Prepare baits the same way as suggested for broiler houses.
Caution: Be
careful to keep children, pets, and other animals out of the houses while
you use quick-kill poisons. Also, dead rats and mice killed by anticoagulants,
if eaten by cats, dogs, or other animals, will sometimes kill the animal
eating the dead rodents. Therefore, consider penning such animals for
a few days to protect them. It might be a good policy to warn neighbors
before using poisons. Because rats and mice can transmit diseases, use
tongs or gloves to pick up the dead animals.
Read the label carefully
before opening a container. Rodenticides are poisonous. Follow directions
and precautions.
Placing Anticoagulant Poisons
If you use anticoagulants
(slow kill) poisons, remember that with most anticoagulants, rats and
mice must eat some of the poison daily for at least five days before they
begin to die. Some information suggests that if rats and mice do not eat
any anticoagulant poison for two days, they recover almost completely
from the poison's effect. For example, if they eat poison for four consecutive
days but not on the fifth and sixth days, you many have to start all over
again with the poisoning program. For this reason, most recommended anticoagulant
baits should be available continuously for at least two weeks. A minimum
two-week poisoning period is, therefore, recommended when using most anticoagulants
because the rats or mice may not feed on the poison every day during the
time the poison is out. Some of the more recently available anticoagulants
are reported to kill in only one to three days of feeding.
If you mix anticoagulant
baits and use according to directions, a population of rats and mice normally
do not detect the danger from consuming the poisoned bait.
After 6 to 12 months
of poisoning with an anticoagulant poison, it might be advisable to change
to different bait and poison materials to kill rats and mice that may
have become wary of or resistant to the materials being used.
Broiler
House
In broiler houses,
the day after you move the chickens, empty all feeders or feeder lines.
Place about a half pint of anticoagulant poisoned bait in each feeder
line or a feeder pan every 25 feet down the length of the house. You probably
get best results from leaving the feeder line in a lowered position, but
you may raise it back out of the way if bait stations are used. Check
the line, and, where needed, add fresh bait each day. If you openly place
too much bait at one time, the rats and mice spoil it with their body
wastes. Bait-dispensing containers, such as cleaned milk cartons and soda
pop or beer cans with holes, appropriately placed to let the bait feed
down as it is being consumed, might work better than poisoned bait placed
openly.
Cage
Laying House
In occupied cage laying
houses, the best placement seems to be pouring a one-fourth-inch-deep
narrow band of the poison material on the walkways under the feeder lines.
Rats and mice seem to accept bait on runways better if it is poured in
a narrow band under the feeder lines as opposed to placing it in small
piles. The walkways along the outside and end walls will normally be the
most frequented areas by rats and mice (especially mice) because it is
easier for them to return quickly to shelter.
Dusting these areas
lightly with flour a day or two before poisoning begins lets you see rat
and mouse tracks. You can then know where and how much bait to place according
to the track patterns.
Try to poison rats
and mice as soon as possible after you sell the hens and have removed
the rodents' usual food supply. Remove layer feed, sweep walkways, leave
some water available, and place bait on runways and/or in feeder line
(one feeder per set of cages) every 10 to 25 feet.
Slatted
Breeder House
You may use both quickkill
and anticoagulant baits under the slatted area any time so long as the
birds cannot reach and eat the baits.
Slatted breeder houses
provide an almost ideal environment for rats and mice. They are protected
from the chickens and predators while under the slats, feed and water
are readily available to them, and they can burrow into the soil or manure
buildup to find nesting space and security. Mice can find enough food
from spilled feed to supply their needs, and since they need very little
water, they can live their whole lives in a 10 to 15-foot diameter under
the slatted space. Rats tend to leave the slatted area to get water and
greater quantities of feed. Consider these differences when deciding where
to place poison bait. It would probably be best to bait for both rats
and mice under the slatted area.
In all cases where
you use poison baits in the open and in the absence of chickens (in or
under the feeder line), be sure to remove and destroy the unused bait
before you put chickens inthe houses.
Poison-Bait Dispensers

Covered Bait Stations for Use
Inside and Outside Poultry Houses
Stations
That Protect the Bait from Other Animals
Beside placing poisoned
baits in the open while no chickens are present, you may use poison baits
any time in covered bait stations. Such stations may consist of 1-inch
× 8-inch or 1-inch × 6-inch boards hinged to a wall area or
in covered, locked bait stations for added security.
Place bait stations
where the rats and mice have been traveling. Neither rats nor mice tend
to vary from their regular travel patterns to eat from bait stations placed
elsewhere.
While using poison
bait in the poultry houses, it is important to use poison bait in bait
stations at other locations that rats may inhabit on the premises. Treat
such places as barns, sheds, and in some cases, homes. Otherwise, rats
and mice from outlying areas will invade the poultry houses as soon as
the resident population is killed. Covered or covered and locked bait
stations are usually recommended when used where they may become accessible
to humans or other animals. You may use both covered and covered and locked
bait stations outside under the eaves of the house on a continuing basis
to kill migrating rats and mice before they enter the poultry house and
mice that set up housekeeping in rolled-up curtains.
To improve success
of rat and mouse control, you must rid the area around the poultry houses
of all trash, clutter, boards, barrels, and cans where rats and mice may
find shelter and a nesting place. It is also helpful to keep the weeds
and grass around the poultry houses and outlying structures cut short
because neither rats nor mice like to travel areas with little overhead
or side protection.
If possible, get neighbors
(whether they have chicken houses or not) to treat at the same time you
do. This will help keep your farm from being quickly reinvaded by rats
and mice from outlying areas.
A good community or
neighborhood program is for each resident to participate in a recommended
poisoning program at 3-month intervals, beginning the first Saturday in
January, April, July, and October. These are just suggested times and
may be altered to coincide with moving birds to market.

Field Identification of Domestic
Rodents

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. Additional rodenticide information
is also listed here.
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.
Vacor
Vacor is 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 6-month intervals.
Strychnine is usually
mixed with canary seed, some cereal grain, or other bait that mice prefer.
Cause of death is respiratory failure.
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.
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.
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 1 to 8 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.
Phosphorus
Phosphorus is used
little today because better, safer rodenticides are available.
Norbormide
Norbormide is not presently
available as a rodenticide.
Characteristics
of Commensal Rodents |
| |
Norway
rat |
Roof
rat |
House
mouse |
| Weight |
10
to 17 oz |
8
to 12 oz |
½
to ¾ oz |
| Total
length
(nose to tip of tail) |
12
to 18 in |
13
to 17 in |
6
to 7 in |
| Head
and body |
Blunt
muzzle; heavy thick body
7 to 10 in |
Pointed
muzzle, slender body
6 to 8 in |
Small
2 to 3 in |
| Tail |
Shorter
than head plus body, carried with much less movement, comparatively,
than roof rat; lighter colored on under side
6 to 8 in |
Longer
than head plus body, generally moving whip-like, uniform coloring
top and bottom at all ages and for all subspecies,
7½ to 10 in |
Equal
to or a little longer than body plus head,
3 to 4 in |
| Ears |
Small,
close set, appear half buried in fur |
Large,
prominent, stand well out from fur |
Prominent,
large for size of animal |
| Fur |
Coarse,
generally red-brown to gray-brown color |
Black
to slate gray; tawny above, gray white below, or, tawny above, white
to lemon belly |
Silky,
dusky gray |
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
2 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 methyl
bromide and others are fast and effective controls for rats and mice in
burrows or tightly closed buildings. Be extremely careful; leave the application
of fumigants to licensed professional applicators.
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| Anticoagulants1 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Brodifacoum* |
0.27 |
0.005 |
good |
good |
yes |
none |
no |
unk2 |
yes |
no |
no |
yes |
unk |
slight# |
| Bromadiolone* |
1.125 |
0.005 |
unk |
unk |
unk |
unk |
no |
unk |
yes |
no |
no |
yes |
unk |
slight# |
| Chlorophacinone* |
20.5 |
0.005 |
unk |
unk |
unk |
unk |
slight |
unk |
yes |
no |
unk |
yes |
unk |
slight# |
| Diphacinone* |
0.5 |
0.005 |
good |
good |
yes |
none |
no |
yes |
yes |
no |
no |
yes |
no |
slight# |
| Fumarin* |
1.0 |
0.025 |
good |
good |
yes |
none |
yes |
yes |
yes |
no |
yes |
yes |
no |
slight# |
| Pival* |
1.0 |
0.025 |
good |
good |
yes |
none |
yes |
yes |
yes |
no |
yes |
yes |
no |
slight# |
| Warfarin* |
1.0 |
0.025 |
good |
good |
yes |
slight |
yes |
yes |
yes |
no |
yes |
yes |
no |
slight# |
| Prolin* |
Warfarin
plus sulfaquinoxaline -- advertised to be more effective than warfarin
alone |
slight# |
| PMP* |
Available
as a tracking powder -- apply in a paper-thin layer to rat and mouse
runways. |
unk |
| Quick-Kill
Poisons |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Arsenic** |
100 |
3.0 |
fair |
fair |
no |
none |
yes |
no |
no |
yes |
yes |
no3 |
no |
medium# |
| Strychnine4
(alkaloid)*** |
6.0 |
0.6 |
fair |
poor |
no |
none |
yes |
no |
yes |
no |
no |
no |
no |
medium# |
| Strychnine4
sulfate*** |
8.0 |
0.8 |
fair |
poor |
no |
none |
yes |
no |
yes |
no |
no |
no |
no |
medium# |
| Vacor* |
4.75 |
unk |
good |
good |
no |
unk |
unk |
unk |
yes |
yes |
unk |
unk |
unk |
medium# |
| Zinc phosphide4* |
40.0 |
1.0 |
good |
good |
no |
medium |
|
no |
yes |
yes |
yes |
no |
no |
medium# |
* Effective against Norway rats, roof rats,
and house mice.
** Effective against Norway rats and roof
rats.
***Effective against mice only.
# Slow acting
## Fast acting
### Very fast acting
1More or less, successive doses required 3-14
days or more.
2Information unknown to author.
3May be taken through cuts or breaks in the
skin; also danger of inhaling loose powder.
4Classified "Restricted" by EPA and, therefore,
must be applied by or under supervision of a certified applicator.
| Rodenticides
- their names, actions, and antidotes |
| Poisons |
Trade
name and other name(s) |
Chemical
name |
Action
(cause of death) |
Antidotes1 |
| Anticoagulants1 |
| Broadifacoum |
Tallon,
pp 581,
WBA 8119
Havoc |
3-[3-4'-bromo
[1-1'-biphenyl]
-4yl)-3-hydroxy-
1-phenylpropyl]
-4-hydroxy-2H-1-
benzopyran-2-one |
Inhibits
clotting of blood, causes internal hemorrhages |
Vitamin
K, and transfusions of whole blood |
| Bromadiolone |
Maki,
Super-Rozol,
Super-Caid |
3-[3-(4'-bromo
[1,1'-biphenyl]
-4yl)-3-hydroxy-
1-phenylpropyl]
-4-hydroxy-2H-1-
benzopyran-2-one |
Inhibits
clotting of blood, causes internal hemorrhages |
Vitamin
K, and transfusions of whole blood |
| Chlorophacinone |
Rozol,
LM91,
Caid,
Drat,
Liphadione,
Microzul,
Ramacide,
Ratomat,
Raviac,
Topitox |
2[p-chlorophenyl)
phenylacetyl]1,3-
indanione |
Inhibits
clotting of blood, causing internal hemorrhages |
Vitamin
K, and transfusions of whole blood |
| Diphacinone |
Diphacin,
Promar,
Ramik |
2
diphenylacetyl-1,3-indandione |
Inhibits
clotting of blood, causes internal hemorrhages |
Vitamin
K, and transfusions of whole blood |
| Fumarin |
Coumafuryl,
furmarin |
3
(alpha-
acetonyl furfuryl)
-4-hydroxycoumarin |
Inhibits
clotting of blood, causes internal hemorrhages |
Vitamin
K, and transfusions of whole blood |
| Pival |
Pindone,
pivaldione,
pivalyn |
2
pivalyl-1,3-
indandione |
Inhibits
clotting of blood, causes internal hemorrhages |
Vitamin
K, and transfusions of whole blood |
| Warfarin |
Coumafene,
kypfarin, RAX,
warfarin plus |
3
(alpha-aceto-
nylbenzyl) 4-
hydroxycoumarin |
Inhibits
clotting of blood, causes internal hemorrhages |
Vitamin
K, and transfusions of whole blood |
| Prolin |
Warfarin
plus
sulfaquinoxaline,
sulfa-Q-22 |
Warfarin
plus
n'-2-quinoxalyl
sulfanilamine |
Inhibits
clotting of blood, causes internal hemorrhages |
Vitamin
K, and transfusions of whole blood |
| PMP |
Valone,
pmp,
motomco tracking
powder |
2-isovaleryl-1,3-
indandione |
Inhibits
clotting of blood, causes internal hemorrhages |
Vitamin
K, and transfusions of whole blood |
| Quick-Kill
Poisons |
| Arsenic |
Orthoarsenic
acid |
H3AsO4 |
Kidney
destruction,
gastroenteritis, central
nervous system affected |
Milk
of magnesia,
milk and water,
oxide of iron |
| Strychnine2
(alkaloid) |
Strychnine
Hydrochloride |
C21H22
N2O2
HCl·2H2O |
Convulsions
due
to super stimulation of
nervous system,
exhaustion, asphyxia |
No
emetic after
10 minutes!
Charcoal in water
and sedative; keep
in dark room |
| Strychnine2
sulfate |
Strychnine
sulfate |
(C21H22
N2O2 )2
H2 SO4·SH2O |
Convulsions
due to
super stimulation of
nervous system,
exhaustion, asphyxa |
No
emetic after
10 minutes!
Charcoal in water
and sedative; keep
in dark room |
| Vacor |
Priminyl,
RH-787, DLP-97 |
1-(3-pyridylmethyl)
-3(4-nitrophenyl)-
urea |
Unknown |
Nicotinamide |
| Zinc
phosphide2 |
Phosvin, |
ZN3P2 |
Heart
paralysis,
gastro-instestinal
and liver damage |
Copper
sulfate
before emetic;
cathartic and water,
avoid fats and oils
(as milk) |
1Emetics are used as first aid except as noted.
Speed is essential.
One tablespoon of salt in a glass of warm water is usually effective.
Call a physician immediately.
2Classified "Restricted" by EPA and, therefore,
must be applied by or
under supervision of a certified applicator.
Distributed
by Dr. Tom Smith, Extension Poultry Science Department. Original
publication by Dr. Robert L. Haynes.
Trade names have been
used in an effort to make the information contained herein more useful.
No endorsement of named products is intended, nor is criticism implied
of similar products that are not mentioned.
Mississippi
State University does
not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin,
sex, age, disability, or veteran status.
Publication 1304
Extension Service of Mississippi State University, cooperating with U.S.
Department of Agriculture.
Published in furtherance of Acts of Congress, May 8 and June 30, 1914.
Ronald
A. Brown, Director
Copyright by Mississippi
State University. All rights reserved.
This document may be copied and distributed for nonprofit educational purposes
provided that credit is given to the Mississippi State University Extension
Service.
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