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Avoid rodenticide bait near homes with pets
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What to Do
Avoid using rodenticide (rat poison) bait stations near homes with cats, dogs, or children. If rodenticides are used at all, choose first-generation anticoagulants in tamper-resistant bait stations and place them where pets and children cannot access them.
Why It Works
Secondary poisoning is a serious and well-documented risk. The University of New Hampshire found that 34 of 35 wild animals necropsied had been exposed to rodenticides — hawks, owls, foxes, and domestic pets eat poisoned rodents and are poisoned in turn. Second-generation anticoagulant rodenticides (SGARs) are particularly dangerous because they bioaccumulate in rodent tissue.
Tips
- A poisoned rodent that dies in an inaccessible wall void creates a severe odor problem for weeks
- Trapping plus exclusion is safer and more effective for most home situations
- The EPA and ASPCA both warn about secondary poisoning risks to pets and wildlife
- If you must use rodenticides, never use loose pellets — always use tamper-resistant stations
📅 Created: 2/9/2026, 4:58:32 AM 📌 best practice 🔧 None