I try not to do bummer posts, but this was a good write up on the lobbying going on by rat poison companies against the efforts of animal rescues and environmental protection groups.
There are efforts going on in many cities/states/countries to ban these poisons that hurt more than just rodents. The effects are horrendous on the rodents and those who eat the poisoned rodents.
You might want to see what is being done where you live on the campaign against SGARs (second generation rodenticides) to push them to save your local wildlife.
Iāve seen so many photos and videos of raptors, foxes, weasels, eagles, and more that have lost their lives. The cruelty and ignorance needs to stop. Iāll spare you guys the pics, but this post is worth a read.
I want to address something pest companies have been bringing up a lot in an attempt to dissuade from a state prohibition on anticoagulant rodenticides. Namely, they really talk up the angle that anticoagulants have an āantidoteā that can help cure exposed animals and people.
For the unfamiliar, anticoagulants work by inhibiting the production of Vitamin K in the body. Vitamin K helps our blood clot. Hence, anticoagulants stop blood from clotting. This is why many victimsāfrom people to pets to wildlife-- die by internal bleeding issues (in their brains, in their guts, etc.).
So, both in human and animal medicine, patients are administered Vitamin K when they are suffering from anticoagulant poisoning.
Hereās the thing though that the pest companies conveniently leave out of the narrative:
Vitamin K can only be an effective treatment if the anticoagulant exposure the patient suffers from has been caught relatively early enough and dependent on how much ARs (and how many different compounds) have been in the personās or animalās system. Often, by the time an animal arrives at the hospital, the poisons have done too much damage to their bodies and has accumulated in such high levels that no amount of Vitamin K can reverse it.
Letās be clear: people have DIED from these poisons tooāalso bleeding outāwhere the Vitamin K didnāt work.
Even in cases where Vitamin K has workedāit almost always requires multi-week if not multi- month daily doses. And usually the people or animals need blood or plasma transfusions-- sometimes numerous onesābecause of all the blood loss they are suffering in the interim.
Remember the case of the Great Horned Owl family on Cape Cod in 2021 treated by New England Wildlife Centersāwhere nearly the ENTIRE FAMILY was obliterated by these poisons? Both parents and two babies died (one was bleeding out of every orifice and neither Vitamin K or an emergency transfusion with a resident owl could save himāsee photo from NEWC). Another owlet did survive. But she required NINE MONTHS of daily Vitamin K doses until her blood would clot on its own again and she could be released.
And yet, pest companies and their lobbying associations disingenuously frame this antidote a one-time panaceaālike a magical EpiPen or anti-venom where you inject the animal once and-- voila!āthey are cured and any bodily damage they have incurred is immediately and completely reversed.
Itās bullshit.
Perhaps when these poisons were a rarity, and animals had modest levels in their systems, Vitamin K could help. But with these poisons so ubiquitous and so many compounds of them everywhereāitās not as helpful.
Letās also be clear that really, when a pet has been
poisoned by ANY rat poisonānot just anticoagulantsāearly detection is the surest way to recovery. The beginning treatment is the same regardless of the type of poison. That isāinduce vomiting, administer activated charcoal to absorb any remnants of the poison still in the digestive system, and then offer electrolytes and supplemental fluids for supportive care. The problem is, of course, many times we donāt know if an animal has been poisoned until this point has been passed.
I will concede the pest companies on one point though. ALL poisons are bad and none of them really should be in widespread or routine circulation. ALL poisons kill animals with first- hand exposure (which is more common than people thinkāweāve all seen the photos and footage of broken open bait stations). And ALL poisons do work up the food chain or cause impacts in some secondary consumers at least to an extent, despite popular belief that some poisons do not.
Tufts Wildlife Clinic found the neurotoxin Bromethalin in the bodies of birds of prey and it was also implicated in the death of another Massachusetts Bald Eagle roughly around the same time of MKās passing. It has also been found in the bodies of mountain lions.
Cholecalciferol, or as itās more commonly known, Vitamin Dāis often promoted as a poison that doesnāt cause secondary impacts. This is false. While there was one small and short-term study on barn owls fed Vit D-poisoned mice where the owls showed no impact, studies on other kinds of predatorsālike dogsāhave shown secondary impact when fed mice or rats poisoned by Vit D. Itās even been theorized the rise in use of Vit D is contributing to coyote deaths (another canid with similar physiology as dogs) in California.
As someone with a science background, a lack of peer review research doesnāt mean something is safe. It just means it hasnāt been studied. And I have no desire to have our wildlife and pets be guinea pigs as we slot in one poison for another.
This is why Save Arlington Wildlife does not endorse or encourage the use of ANY rat poison and discourages their use overall. That is why businesses that sign our poison-free pledge and get to have SAWās sign on their store windows have committed to no rat poisons.
Itās a balancing act. You canāt be letting mice and rats live in your home chewing on electrical wires, thatās a fire hazard.
So you say youāll take the humane option and use snap traps that just kill the rodent, nothing else. Which sounds easy enough until youāve been woken up at 3am to the screams of a half dead mouse and had to put it out of its misery by hand.
So we use the SGARs with care and caution.
They may not scream but death by poisoning is still agony. And at least a snap trap means you know where the body is, instead of it decomposing in the walls and bringing bugs. Thatās before you get into the whole food chain effect of OPās post.
There are sleeves and wraps available to protect the wiring, as well as steel wool to plug holes.
Nobody wants want to be woken at 3 am by their cat presenting the leftovers of its successful mouse-pounce, but itās much worse to have to run it to the emergency vet because the mouse was full of poison their landlord put out.
Iāve had good luck with my automatic electrocution traps. My toddler canāt get in there, and I got sick to having to manually kill 5 mice a week from the no kill traps.
I feel you, At my last house we had an infestation happen. I tried the dumper buckets, glue traps, snap traps, electric traps. I eventually managed to get rid of them, It took ages and the incessant chewing comforting from the walls was more than I could handle.
When I moved, I set up glue traps to the sides of the garage door and in disused rooms behind the doors. There is some rat poison around but it should be the last place they should get to Itās there as a last ditch effort hopefully they never reach it.