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#wildlife control
if-you-fan-a-fire · 2 years
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“Pheasant Shooting in Western Ontario,” Kingston Whig-Standard. October 29, 1932. Page 1. ---- Guns cracked over a 170-miles front in Ontario, October 28, as a two-day pheasant hunt was officially started. This fair Diana shows how it’s done. She's Ruth Yerzy.
[AL: The Ontario pheasant hunt in 1932 was particularly controversial, for a number of reasons. The Ontario government was obviously attempting to limit the hunt to preserve animal numbers, and were draconian against out of season hunters - many of whom were poor men and women during the Depression who desperately needed food. But the hunt itself was accompanied by violence between game wardens and hunters, and between small town and rural locals and the rich tourist hunters, many from Toronto, Hamilton, and other urban centres, who swarmed rural areas, caused a ruckus, and were accused of overhunting. This photo definitely showcases one of the tourist hunters, who were understandably some of the least willing to accede to pheasant quotas during the days of the hunt itself, even when they might support penalizing poachers out of season. This was also one of the first years it was regulated on Pelee Island especially - a popular destination that really concentrated the conflicts here.]
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rustysanimalcontrol · 1 month
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Expert Bug Control: Reliable Exterminator Solutions
Dealing with bug and pest infestations is a concern for every property manager and building owner. From ant invasions to the unnerving sight of cockroaches scuttling away when the lights turn on, the presence of bugs can severely affect the comfort and safety of your property.
The quest for a reliable bug control service is fraught with challenges, especially when faced with companies that offer quick fixes, yet fail to tackle the problem at its core.
Specialized Bug Extermination for Property Managers & Businesses
Finding a pest management company that offers dependable, year-round service for commercial, industrial, and residential properties can feel like searching for a needle in a haystack. The issues of inexperienced staff, high turnover, and generic extermination practices complicate the search for a service that can genuinely meet the needs of property managers, businesses, and homeowners.
At Rusty’s Animal Control (RAC), we understand the unique challenges bugs present to your property. We don’t just offer pest control; we provide peace of mind with our experience, diligence, scientific approach and a process tailored to solve bug problems effectively.
The RAC Bug Control Approach: Tailored Solutions for Every Infestation
The RAC approach to bug control goes beyond the initial extermination. We start with a thorough inspection and assessment of your property, followed by persistent efforts to not just control but eliminate the bug problem. Our plans are customized to the specific bugs, their habitats, and behaviors, ensuring a strategic response that addresses the issue at its root.
Effective bug control is a science. Understanding the life cycle of various bug species is crucial to developing an effective extermination plan. Without this knowledge, efforts can easily become futile. RAC utilizes scientific principles to inform our strategies, ensuring that our efforts are not just effective but also efficient and long-lasting.
Start with a Comprehensive Assessment
Delaying action against bugs only worsens the problem. If your property is facing an infestation, reaching out for a professional assessment is the first step toward a solution.
RAC offers thorough assessments for a wide range of bugs, including ants, bees, centipedes, cockroaches, earwigs, mice (when related to bug control), millipedes, moths, rats (in the context of their role in spreading bugs), spiders, stink bugs, and wasps.
While we are equipped to detect bed bugs and termites, our focus is on providing comprehensive control and extermination services for a broad spectrum of other bugs.
Get in Touch for a Tailored Quote
Understanding the nuances of bug control and extermination services is essential for any property manager or business owner looking to protect their property from infestations. Contact Rusty’s Animal Control today to learn more about how we can help you keep your property bug-free.
Learn more about pest control and exterminator services
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skedaddledh · 8 months
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The Benefits of Fall Yard Maintenance For Wildlife in Coquitlam
During the fall, most Coquitlam homeowners get started with yard maintenance tasks. However, while beneficial for your property, yard maintenance also helps out wildlife. To learn the benefits of fall yard maintenance for wildlife, click the link here.
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fairclothchimneysweeps · 10 months
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https://www.fairclothchimneysweeps.com
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360wildlifecontrol · 11 months
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Wildlife wonders: Expert control for harmonious coexistence.
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Experience the wonders of nature while ensuring a peaceful environment with our expert wildlife control services like fox control surrey in the UK. Harmonious coexistence is our priority. Follow us for more information.
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Raccoon Control La Porte, TX
La Porte, TX, like many other cities in Texas, is no stranger to wildlife encounters. Among the various wild animals that can cause problems for homeowners, raccoons stand out as one of the most common pests. Raccoons are notorious for their ability to invade residential areas in search of food and shelter. 
Dealing with a raccoon infestation requires prompt action to protect your property and ensure the safety of your family. In this blog post, we will explore effective raccoon control methods in La Porte, TX, and highlight the importance of seeking professional assistance from reputable wildlife control companies.
Understanding Raccoons
Raccoons are medium-sized mammals native to North America. Known for their distinctive black mask-like markings around their eyes and ringed tails, they are highly adaptable creatures. Raccoons are opportunistic omnivores, feeding on a wide variety of food sources, including garbage, fruits, nuts, insects, and small animals. Their dexterous paws allow them to manipulate objects, making them capable of causing significant damage to property.
While raccoons may appear cute and harmless, they can pose various risks and cause extensive damage. Raccoons may carry diseases, including rabies, which can be transmitted to humans and domestic animals through bites or scratches. They can also contaminate food and water sources with their feces, potentially leading to the spread of diseases. Raccoons are notorious for creating messes and destruction by tearing up insulation, damaging roofs, and destroying gardens.
Signs of Raccoon Infestation
Recognizing the signs of raccoon infestation is crucial for prompt intervention. Here are some common indicators of raccoon presence in your property:
Tracks and Droppings: 
Raccoon tracks often resemble tiny handprints and can be found near potential entry points or areas where they forage for food. Their droppings are cylindrical in shape, similar to dog feces, but smaller and darker in color.
Property Damage: 
Raccoons are skilled climbers and may damage roofs, attic vents, and chimneys in their search for entry points. Additionally, they may tear up insulation and damage gardens or bird feeders while scavenging for food.
Unusual Noises and Behaviors: 
Raccoons are primarily nocturnal animals, so hearing loud noises, scratching sounds, or chirping coming from your attic or walls during the night could indicate their presence.
The Need for Professional Raccoon Control
While some homeowners may consider DIY approaches to raccoon control, it is highly recommended to seek professional assistance from wildlife control companies. Here's why:
Expert Knowledge and Experience: Professional wildlife control providers have extensive knowledge of raccoon behavior and effective removal techniques. They employ safe and humane methods to handle raccoons, ensuring the well-being of both the animals and humans.
Specialized Equipment and Techniques: Wildlife control companies possess the necessary tools and equipment to safely trap and remove raccoons from your property. They also implement exclusion methods to prevent future raccoon infestations.
Compliance with Regulations: Wildlife removal should be performed in accordance with local and state regulations. Professional raccoon control services understand these regulations and operate within the legal framework, ensuring a lawful and ethical approach to wildlife management.
Raccoon Control Methods
Professional raccoon control services employ various techniques to effectively manage raccoon infestations. Here are some commonly used methods:
Trapping and Removal: 
Experts use live traps to capture raccoons safely. Once trapped, they relocate the animals to a more suitable habitat away from residential areas.
Preventive Measures: 
Wildlife control companies identify and secure potential entry points in your home, such as gaps in the roof or openings in the foundation. By addressing these vulnerabilities, they prevent raccoons from reentering your property.
Exclusion Methods:
Installing barriers like wire mesh or chimney caps can further deter raccoons from accessing your home. These exclusion techniques block entry points while still allowing ventilation and preventing other wildlife from entering.
Tips for Preventing Future Raccoon Infestations
Preventing future raccoon infestations is essential to maintain a raccoon-free environment. Here are some highlighted tips to keep raccoons at bay:
Secure Potential Entry Points: 
Inspect your property for any openings that raccoons could use to access your home. Seal gaps in the roof, foundation, and vents to prevent their entry.
Proper Garbage Management: 
Ensure garbage cans are securely closed and consider using raccoon-proof lids. Store garbage in enclosed areas until collection day to prevent raccoons from accessing it.
Landscape Considerations: 
Trim tree branches away from your house, as raccoons can use them to gain access. Installing motion-activated lights or sprinklers can also deter raccoons from approaching your property.
Remove Food Sources: 
Don't leave pet food or bird feeders outdoors overnight, as they can attract raccoons. Clean up fallen fruits or nuts from trees regularly.
Secure Outdoor Structures: 
Keep sheds, garages, and other outdoor structures securely closed to prevent raccoons from seeking shelter.
Cover Chimneys and Openings: 
Install chimney caps and cover any openings where raccoons can enter your home.
Eliminate Water Sources: 
Fix any leaks or sources of standing water in your yard, as raccoons are attracted to water.
Get rid of these nuisance!
Raccoon control is a crucial aspect of maintaining a safe and healthy environment in La Porte, TX. By understanding raccoon behavior, recognizing signs of infestation, and seeking professional assistance from reputable wildlife control companies like AAAC Wildlife Removal, homeowners can effectively manage raccoon problems and safeguard their property.
Remember, acting promptly and implementing preventive measures are key to preventing future raccoon encounters. Stay proactive and create a raccoon-free environment in La Porte, TX.
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tj-crochets · 3 months
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Re the rabid skunk
I’m from a country town and while it’s not something I was taught in school, I was definitely taught by my parents and other adults in my life to report possibly rabid or sick animals. There is some worry about rabies and other diseases diseases rising in the wildlife population so the forest service try to stay on top of it.
It’s a little messed up that no one was taking your concern seriously. Even if it was just a weird skunk, rabies and other animal diseases are no joke and pose a threat to people and other animals.
Thank you! It's very...idk the word. Affirming? Good to know it's not just me that thinks it's like a responsibility to report potentially rabid animals, like it's just a thing you do
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wolveswolves · 1 year
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Sweden’s biggest, controversial endangered wolf cull has started but campaigners fight on 
February 2023 - Hunters have already shot dead 54 wolves in Sweden’s largest ever cull, while scientists warn that wolf numbers are not large enough to sustain a healthy population
Hunters have shot dead 54 wolves in a month in Sweden’s largest and most controversial cull of the animals yet, prompting fury from conservationists and satisfaction among farmers who consider the predators a threat to their livelihoods.
The Stockholm government has authorised the shooting of 75 wolves in its 2023 cull, more than twice last year’s figure, despite warnings from scientists that wolf numbers are not large enough to sustain a healthy population.
“Wolves are a threat for those of us who live in rural areas,” said Kjell-Arne Ottosson, a Christian Democrat MP and vice-president of the parliament’s environment and agriculture committee. “We have to manage that. We have to take this seriously.”
Farmers say more than 340 sheep were killed in 2021 by a Swedish wolf population estimated at about 460. The predators, which in the 1960s were thought to be extinct in Sweden, are also resented by hunters, who say the dogs they use to track and drive deer and elk are regularly attacked.
“This cull is absolutely necessary to slow the growth of wolves. Sweden’s wolf population is the largest we have had in modern times,” Gunnar Glöersen, predator manager at the Swedish Hunters’ Association, told public broadcaster SVT.
However, the scale of this year’s planned cull – only 203 wolves have been shot in total in Sweden in the 12 years since authorised hunting resumed – has alarmed conservationists. “It’s tragic,” said Daniel Ekblom of the Nature Conservation Society. “It could have consequences for a long time to come.”
Scientists have said that to sustain a healthy population, the wolf population roaming Sweden and Finland should not fall below 500, and Sweden’s Environmental Protection Agency has said at least 300 are necessary to avoid harmful inbreeding.
Led by centre- and far-right parties, however, Sweden’s parliament voted two years ago to cap the wolf population at 270, while the Swedish Hunters’ Association wants to go even further and lower the limit to 150 animals.
Wolf numbers fell steeply in Sweden after 1789, when a law was passed allowing commoners to hunt. That led to the decimation of the deer and elk populations, prompting wolves to prey more on livestock – and the state to pay a bounty for every wolf killed.
The population shrank to the brink of extinction and the predator was declared a protected species in the 1960s. Numbers began growing again 20 years later, however, when three wolves from the Russian-Finnish population migrated to central Sweden.
Conservation organizations in the country have attempted to overturn the wolf hunting mandate but have been unsuccessful.
Groups used the Bern Convention as their main argument. An international treaty agreed upon in 1979, the convention seeks to protect both wildlife and their habitats. Actions to do so are taken in the name of conservation.
“Wolves as top predators in the food chain are a prerequisite for biodiversity. Killing a quarter of the population through hunting has negative consequences for animals and nature,” Marie Stegard, president of Swedish anti-hunting group Jaktkritikerna told the Guardian.
“It’s disastrous for the entire ecosystem. The existence of wolves contributes to a richer animal and plant life. Human survival depends on healthy ecosystems.”
The European Commission has previously opened infringement proceedings against Sweden, warning that the annual cull falls foul of the EU’s habitats directive since “the wolf population has not reached a level that guarantees its conservation”.
“It’s astonishing that Sweden keeps on making these decisions,” said Marie Stegard Lind of the anti-hunting group Jaktkritikerna. “The commission has been very clear about its opinion that these hunts are, in fact, illegal,” Lind told AFP.
This year’s cull began in early January and ends on 15 February, although several regional authorities have already called it off having reached their quota. Experts have said the government’s planned national total of 75 wolves may not be reached.
Under pressure from farmers and hunters, the government authorised limited annual culls again in 2010. Since then, the wolf “has become a symbol of the conflict between the city and rural areas”, Johanna Sandahl of the Nature Conservation Society told AFP.
Sources: [x], [x]
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if-you-fan-a-fire · 2 years
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“Scenes From Ontario’s Fall Drama, ‘Man Versus Pheasant’,” Toronto Star. October 28, 1932. Page 19. ---- Hunters are after pheasants in the peninsula and lakeshore areas. One of the hunters, H. Rooker, is seen with his spaniel in (1). Frank Walker, of Broadway Ave. (2) made a near-record bag, getting a jack-rabbit, squirrel and pheasant. Someone shot a squirrel (4), and left it in the tree. W. Pearce, hired-man on a farm is seen putting up a ‘no-shooting’ sign in (3) T. L. Kennedy, M.P.P., posted the sign seen in (5), on his farm. In (6) is shown a hunter with two cock pheasants and rabbit, which he shot shortly after 8 a.m. on the farm of F. A. Rowlett, Upper Middle Rd., Trafalgar.
[AL: The Ontario pheasant hunt in 1932 was particularly controversial, for a number of reasons. The Ontario government was obviously attempting to limit the hunt to preserve animal numbers, and were draconian against out of season hunters - many of whom were poor men and women during the Depression who desperately needed food. But the hunt itself was accompanied by violence between game wardens and hunters, and between small town and rural locals and the rich tourist hunters, many from Toronto, Hamilton, and other urban centres, who swarmed rural areas, caused a ruckus, and were accused of overhunting. This short photo montage really drives home the issue - hunters regularly trespassed on farms and rural properties, threatened accidentally or deliberately locals, shot each other due to poor gun safety and hunting experience, and generally made a nuisance of themselves. It also cuts against stereotypes of urban vs. rural life - it was the small town and rural populations trying to protect local wildlife while big city fanatics engaged in an orgy of shooting.]
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fjordfolk · 1 year
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here's a pet peeve of mine: editing gear and leashes out of a dog portrait etc or w/e is great and valid and all but i also think showing dogs with appropriate equipment is i-would-go-as-far-as-to-say important. especially re: blog/instagram/slice of life style content. imo it endorses responsible ownership.
i think maybe especially now that more people (in norway at least) are getting dogs or getting into dogs without prior experience. normalizing and showing properly and responsibly managed dogs living enriched, fulfilling lives etc etc. stop skewing the perception of how normal/common it is for dogs to be safely/appropriately off leash in open access areas.
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skedaddledh · 2 years
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How Wildlife Beat the Heat, and How Humans Can Help
Summer weather can reach high temperatures. Humans are lucky with air-conditioned houses, but wildlife is left to find a way to beat the heat on their own. To learn how they do it and what we can do to help them out, click the link here.
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emery-matsushita-vt · 3 months
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It's stream time, skaters!
Today we're starting yet another new game - Cuphead! And I'll have Crowd Control active, so you can mess with my game! And any purchases made through CC will go to the WWF! That's pretty neato!
Live now, come drop in!
twitch_live
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bumblebeeappletree · 4 months
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In the face of extreme habitat loss, wildlife biologist Dr. Chris Jenkins puts an ambitious plan in motion to save two uniquely American reptiles, the eastern indigo snake and the gopher tortoise, and the forest they call home.
The two threatened species are as important to their ecosystems as they are interconnected themselves. The eastern indigo snake is a prolific hunter that manages predator populations in the southeastern United States. In the northern part of its range, the snakes – along with more than 350 other species – rely on the deep burrows that the gopher tortoise creates to survive freezing temperatures every winter.
Both the indigo snakes and gopher tortoises are in steep decline, as their native habitat has been deforested for centuries and then further fragmented by roads with fast-moving vehicles. Dr. Chris Jenkins is part of a massive conservation effort that takes the reptiles’ homes into account. The team surveys the most critical tortoise land, purchases it, and then restores the native forests. From there, Dr. James Bogan, who leads the only eastern indigo breeding program in the world, can reintroduce new snakes to areas where they have previously gone extinct – with plenty of tortoise burrows to protect them.
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roadtrippinlilly · 9 months
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After The Burn...
Source Me laf@ilyF ❤️
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plethoraworldatlas · 3 months
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More than 30 wildlife conservation groups today urged the U.S. Forest Service to prohibit Idaho from paying private contractors to shoot wolves from aircraft in national forests in central and southeastern Idaho. The Idaho Wolf Depredation Control Board recently approved the controversial predator control measure.
Specifically, today’s letter asked the Forest Service to grant a 2023 petition from the Center for Biological Diversity. The petition explained that gunning down wolves from helicopters risks harm to other wildlife like grizzly bears and Canada lynx, as well as public safety and wilderness values.
If the Forest Service fails to promptly grant the petition, the groups may consider legal action in federal court.
“Recreationists should not have to worry about their safety while enjoying our public lands,” said Christine Gertschen, co-director of the Conservation Connection Foundation.
��Aerial gunning is dangerous for all concerned, especially for our native wildlife.”
The Idaho Wolf Depredation Control Board is funded primarily by tax dollars. The proposals approved for funding could allow aerial gunning across much of Idaho, including lands in the Caribou-Targhee National Forest, Boise National Forest, Salmon-Challis National Forest, Sawtooth National Forest and Payette National Forest.
“Aerial gunning prioritizes wolf killings over the health and safety of our shared forests,” said Sasha Truax, presidents of Teens Restoring Earth’s Environment. “It is a twisted abuse of public funding and its continuance exposes the brutality of wolf management on public lands. It must be stopped.”
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sherry-the-wasp · 1 month
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Finally, someone said it! This was from a review from someone who bought a "Rescue Wasp Trapstik" and ended up regretting it.
I really like how Sidney explains how you should study the creature you are dealing with to determine if it is really necessary to kill it or not. She also states that if you have to kill them, it should be done quick and painlessly to reduce suffering.
Rescue even states that their product is also meant to target not only yellowjackets and hornets, but mud daubers too. MUD DAUBERS. One of the most docile species of wasp in the world!
These traps have also caught birds, bats, other beneficial insects, and even lizards.
Here is an example of what happens when small animals come in contact with these traps
TW for injured bird (there is no gore, but it is still pretty upsetting)
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Glue traps have thankfully been banned in the UK. Unfortunately, they have not been banned where I live (the US). Glue traps pose a serious threat to native wildlife. I really hope that someday that these kinds of traps are banned in the US.
Remember, if you really need to kill something (whether it is rodents infesting your house, an invasive species, etc.) please make sure you give it a quick and painless death so it doesn't suffer. There are plenty of products out there for doing just that.
Also, do NOT buy glue traps.
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