After learning that students at Baylor University submitted complaints regarding mice and rats at an off-campus apartment complex, Park Place Waco, PETA is doing what the property management apparently wonât: offering humane solutions.
One student alleged that the management placed glue traps in his apartment. Glue traps are extremely cruel devices that slowly kill sensitive rats and mice.
In a bid to encourage building managers to offer effective, nonlethal methods of dealing with âunwanted houseguests,â PETA is planning to place an ad near Park Place Waco as a reminder that rats and mice deserve respect and compassion. Weâre also offering cruelty-free tips to students so that they can humanely remove unwanted animals from their homes and relocate them to safe areas.
Why You Should NEVER Use Glue Traps
Animals caught in glue traps desperately struggle to escape, which causes them to become even more helplessly stuck. The glue often rips off their fur, feathers, or skin. Some animals even chew off their own limbs in an attempt to free themselves. It can take days for trapped animals to die from exhaustion, injury, shock, dehydration, asphyxiation, starvation, or blood lossâan undeniably cruel fate for anyone to endure. Those who survive may be crushed to death in the garbage, which is where manufacturers of glue traps direct consumers to âdisposeâ of them.
In addition to being cruel, lethal traps and poisons are not long-term solutions for removing mice or rats from your home. When rodents are killed, the survivors breed faster, which causes an increase in the population. And the devices fail to address the source of the problem: If holes arenât plugged up and attractants arenât removed, more animals will move in to take the place of those who have been killed.
You may not want rats and mice in your home, but they still deserve your empathy. Here are some humane methods for rodent control:
Humane Rodent Control Tips for All Residents, Homeowners, and Building Managers
- Contain food in chew-proof containers, made of metal or glass, and keep garbage tightly lidded, even indoors. Keep surfaces, floors, and cabinets free of crumbs and spills. Consider moving some foods from the cupboard to the refrigerator.
- Feed companion animals indoors, and then pick up their dishes when they have finished eating.
- Trim back vegetation around buildings, and seal any holes larger than a quarter inch in diameter, cracks in the walls and floors, and spaces around doors, windows, and plumbing.
- Monitor rodent activity by using a flashlight to identify entry points and frequented areas. Look specifically for droppings, chewed areas, nests, and stored/cached food. Placing ammonia-soaked rags in areas where indications of animals or droppings are seen will drive them out.
- Rats and other small animals cannot tolerate the scent or taste of pepper. Make a mixture of salad oil, horseradish, garlic, and plenty of cayenne pepper. Let this mixture sit for four days, strain it into a spray bottle, and spray it in frequented areas. It wonât harm curious animals, but it will drive them away. Mothballs and peppermint oilâsoaked cotton balls are also great rodent repellents.
- Once animals are gone, use foam sealant, steel wool, hardware cloth, or metal flashing to seal entry points.
- After rodent-proofing the building, live-trap and remove any rats or mice still inside. Use a commercially available, cruelty-free Havahart trap or make your own. You can find humane, reusable Smart Mousetraps in our online catalog at PETA.com.
- Check the trap hourly, and release any captured rodents within 100 yardsâso as not to disorient themâof where they were caught.
Show Compassion to Rats and Mice
Rats and mice are smart and family-oriented, and they can recognize their names when theyâre called. They deserve to be treated with compassion and respectânot killed and discarded. Show empathy to them by never using glue traps or poisons and by always choosing humane methods of rodent control.
You can also help by telling companies like Loweâs and The Home Depot to stop selling cruel glue traps:
The post PETA Condemns Landlords for Baylor Studentsâ âRodent Problems,â Offers Humane Solutions appeared first on PETA.
Source: Peta.org