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House Mouse
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Size: It's body rarely exceeding two
inches long and one ounce in weight.
Color: Usually gray in color, but some may appear darker.
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Mice are more numerous than rats and are more widespread throughout
urban and suburban communities. A mouse can be distinguished from
a young rat since the rat's head and feet will be overly large in
relation to its body.
Behavior
Few people really like rats or mice, and no one wants them in their
house. Rodents live everywhere outside and could enter at any
time, but fortunately, this does not occur often. Usually, most
home invasions
occur in the fall, not because of cooler weather, but because
the seeds and plants on which rodents feed outside are gone.
Rats and
mice must then seek new food sources. Unfortunately, one of these
sources may be your home. Mice are excellent climbers and are
capable of gaining entry through holes around soffit vents and
around cables
entering the building, through holes in gable vent screens, and
through turbine and box vents on roofs. Most garage doors on
homes allow enough space for mice to fit underneath.
Habitat
Mice are found in almost every part of the country from urban to
rural areas, and are especially prevalent in urban and suburban
communities. Mice are found in buildings more often than rats because
they are smaller and are able to find more available entryways into
a building. Mice can fit through a crack or hole 1/4 of an inch
or larger - or about the width of a pencil. Mice will make their
nests in many areas in and around the home, especially in stacked
firewood, stones and bricks, and piles of leaves or other debris.
Tips for Control
The best way to avoid invasions of mice is to
- provide as little
harborage as possible that might attract rodents
- seal
as many holes and cracks in the outside of the home through
which mice
might enter.
Follow these recommendations to help prevent
rodents from seeking the shelter provided by your home:
- Keep firewood stored as far from the home as possible and store
it off the ground. During the winter, store only enough wood
next to the house to burn every couple of days.
- If possible, remove any piles of debris, stones, bricks, etc.
If these are near the foundation of the home they serve as harborages
to attract rodents. Once there, it is any easy step for rodents
to
enter the building itself.
- Do not allow piles of leaves to accumulate next to the home's
foundation. This also serves as attractive harborage for rodents
- mice in particular.
- Seal any hole or crack larger than 1/4 of an inch. A good rule
of thumb is that if a pencil can fit into it, a mouse could too.
Large
holes or cracks should be stuffed with steel wool or wire mesh
before sealing with caulk or foam, otherwise rodents could chew
through to
enter.
- Install good, thick weatherstrip on the bottom of all doors to
prevent rodents from entering. The garage door may prove difficult
to seal
completely, so the door from the garage to the house must be
sealed tightly.
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