D22'-Lahcaster Farming Saturday, November IS, 1986 On the basis of an informal survey of rodent experts at the latest Vertebrate Pest Conference, more than 50 percent of the rat and mouse bait used annually in agricultural situations is wasted. There are many reasons why much bait is wasted and why many rodent control programs fail. Among the chief reasons are lack of knowledge and misconceptions about rat and mouse baits, failure to follow application directions, and failure to follow an initial baiting attempt with a complete, sustained control program. Rex E. Marsh, Specialist in Vertebrate Ecology, University of Califomia-Davis, singles out one factor in particular: “Bait placement is probably the single most important thing. Most people try to use an ‘eyeball census’ and have no idea how many rodents they have to begin with, or how many they have left after a baiting attempt. They don’t buy enough bait to begin with and they don’t place it properly.” Proper bait placement is based on a knowledge of the rodent, and an understanding of the bait being used. Published information about rodents and rodent control efforts commonly emphasizes the unique and almost amazing attributes of rats and mice, such as their well chronicled ability to survive in harsh environments; their ability to gnaw through soft bricks and aluminum; chew through elec trical wires; their ability to scale vertical walls, squeeze through small openings, jump great distances, swim many miles and withstand falls from great heights. Also emphasized is the biology of ATTENTION FARMERS Call deck’s for quick removal of dead & disabled animals. Free of charge. Located in Mifflintown, PA j 717-436-8272 Also Serving Lancaster, Carlisle, York & Millersburg areas. arfin I IMECTAIiE ■iiIVIES I IdFUES Take advantage of early results by liming m the late Summer and Fall. Get ground ready for the first Spring shoots by allowing the lime all winter to condition the soil. MARTIN LIMESTONE. INC. Blue Ball, Pa. 354-4125 Pa. 442-4148 Bait Placement the rodent, how quickly they multiply and how much they eat, waste and destroy. Without minimizing the im portance or interesting aspects of all these things, Rex Marsh stresses. “Rather than biology, it is the behavior of rats and mice, and their behavioral differences, that are important. For example, mice have a much smaller ‘home range’ than rats, and their feeding characteristics are completely different. Rats will eat what they want in one feeding whereas mice nibble. Rats are suspicious about new objects in their environment but mice are curious and will readily investigate.” It sounds too obvious, but the first step in any rodent control program should be to indentify the rodent pest present. A mouse is not a small rat. Young rats are not mice. Behavioral characteristics in fluence, and dictate, the proper placement of rat and mouse bait. Especially important is the customary or ‘habit’ travel path...where rodents prefer to travel as they range for food, and how far they normally travel in order to feed. If food conditions are plentiful, the house mouse on average will restrict activity to a range of a few feet, and will often cover their entire range daily to check out any change in their surroundings. Rats range much farther than mice in their search for food. Both rats and mice prefer to travel along walls, foundations, in burrows, etc., using long sensing whiskers or vibrissae. These behavior patterns are im portant with respect to the placement of both bait and traps. Apply line early Critical In Rodent Control Any rodenticide should be placed where it has a good chance of being what it is supposed to be - an at tractive and alternate food source. Using any rodenticide, the car dinal rule is; They must eat the bait. If the bait is placed where it becomes moldy, musty, insect affected, or excrement contaminated (in poultry or swine confinement facilities), the ac ceptance of the bait will be af fected. In addition to the behavior of the rodent, the density of the population (number of rodents present), and proper positioning of the bait, an understanding of the bait used also is important. Most of the baits commonly used over the past forty years, since the commercialization of warfarin in 1947, are anticoagulant baits. In the use of these baits, the user should distinguish between first generation and second generation products. First generation anticoagulants are multiple feeding baits. The rodent must feed numerous times on the bait in order to consume a lethal dose. After a lethal dose has been consumed over numerous feedings, the rodent dies of un controlled internal hemorrhaging. Important in the use of these first generation anticoagulant baits is the realization that an adequate supply of bait must be kept before the rodents for several days so that multiple can occur. If an initial baiting is quickly cleaned up and the bait not replaced, the result will likely be a failed control effort. Not many rodents will die but many will become sick. Second generation anticoagulant baits usually are termed ‘single ANNAPOLIS, Md. - Public Section 208 of the Federal Clean comment on the Maryland Water Act. It puts forth the state’s Agricultural Water Quality agricultural program for Management Program will be protecting water quality, received at two public hearings Deadline for written comments scheduled for Nov. 24, 7:30-9:30 is Nov. 30, 1986. Copies of the p.m. at the Florence Bain Senior proposed program may be ob- Activities Center, 5470 Beaverhill tained from the State Soil Con- Road in Columbia and Nov. 25, servation Committee, Maryland 7:30-9:30 p.m. at Easton High Department of Agriculture, 50 School, Mecklenburg Avenue in Harry S. Truman Parkway, An- Easton. ' napohs, Md. 21401. For further The State Soil Conservation information contact Anne Sielmg Committee has proposed this (841-5863) or Louise Lawrence program in accordance with (841-5865). X “Christmas Shopping Doesn’ Get Any Easier Than This!” 8 8 8 I I 8 8 8 8 I , 8 j g PLEASE SEND LANCASTER FARMING TO: I R I g (Pleas* complete all blanks in lull) | 8 NAME I 8 g ADDRESS j { CITY STATE j | ZIP COUNTY -j g GIFT CARD TO READ FROM | ONLY *8.50 PER YEAR or *15.00 FOR TWO YEARS In PA. NJ. MD, DE. NY, VA & WV (Other Areas $15.00 Per Year or $26.00 For Two Years) feeding’ baits (although they sometimes work as multiple feeding baits). They are ‘single feeding’ only in a limited sense, however. Second generation an ticoagulant baits, usually for mulated with bromadiolone or brodifacoum, are toxic enough that the rodent will normally consume a lethal dose in a single feeding rather warfarin-based products. However, even after having consumed a lethal dose in one feeding, rodents typically will feed multiple times on these baits during the days of delay until death, building up toxicity in the rodent carcass that can pose a secondary poisoning hazard. In choosing a rat or mouse bait to fit a particular agricultural situation, where the hazard posed to pets or non-target animals may be a key concern, there are new rodenticides available that provide an distinct alternative to long familiar anticoagulant baits. One of these new baits is True Grit RAMPAGE (R), marketed by CEVA Laboratories, Inc. Instead of the familiar in ternal hemorrhaging mode of action (anticoagulant), RAM Give A Gift J That Lasts \ All Year... \ LANCASTER FARMING Will SFND A GIFT CARD Announcing The Start Of The Gift Subscription Comments Requested On Md. Water Quality PAGE uses Vitamin D 3 as the active ingredient, and the mode of action is calcification of the cir culatory system, and resulting death through heart attack. An economic plus with this new bait is that it is true single feeding Unlike second generation an ticoagulant baits where the rodent will feed multiple tunes even after consuming a lethal does in a ‘single feeding,’ once a rodent consumes a lethal dose of RAMPAGE all in take of food and bait ceases. The , rodent does not continue to feed \ and waste bait during the days of delay until death. Because of the Vitamin D 3 ingredient, there is no secondary poisoning hazard with RAMPAGE to endanger pets or non-target animals which might feed on the rodent carcass. In rodent control programs, users often try one new rodent bait after another and are disappointed with results. Sometimes the problem is that they are trying the same product over and over, dressed up in a new package and marketed under a new name. And sometimes the reason for control failure is simply not putting the bait in the right place. ill This LANCASTER FARMING P.O. BOX 366 LITITZ. PA 17543 Subscriptions Will Begin With Christmas Issue >nT(