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Meadow Vole Solutions order in Peoria
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Meadow Vole Solutions

Meadow Vole Solutions

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USA, Peoria
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Description

Appearance:

The Meadow Vole has a long, cylindrical, fur-covered body with chunky build and a short tail. It has a rounded nose and ears that are partially buried in its black or brown fur. Their fore and hind paws differ in that the front paws have four toes whereas their hind paws have five. On average, they are 3-5 inches in length and weigh 3/4 to 2 1/2 ounces.

Diet:

The Meadow Vole is a herbivore, feeding mainly on the grasses that are abundant in its environment. When grass is not readily available, such as during the winter months, the meadow vole may often gnaw on tree bark as a source of nourishment. They often will eat nuts and seeds when available.

Solutions:

What you can do: The best solution to the meadow vole problem is to rodent-proof buildings as one would to exclude house mice. Fine-mesh wire fencing or metal barriers (at least 12 inches high) will protect vegetable gardens and fruit tree trunks from meadow vole feeding damage and prevent voles from falling into swimming pools. To prevent the mice from digging under such fences, the bottom edge should be buried 6 to 12 inches deep. Meadow voles rarely climb even low wire-mesh fences.

Live-trapping: Sherman-type live-catch box traps (10" x 3" x 3" or similar) work quite well when placed next to walls. The vole's relatively large size makes ineffective some multiple-catch traps designed for the much smaller house mouse. If live-trapping is the goal, traps must be checked daily for captured voles. Live-trapped voles should not be released near residential areas.

Lethal-trapping: Occasionally, meadow voles enter buildings but almost never become established and reproduce there. Meadow voles are best captured indoors with mouse snap traps set in pairs at right angles to the wall. Expanded trigger models are most effective, and peanut butter often makes a good bait. Within buildings meadow voles may be attracted to baited traps but more often run into traps placed in their line of movement whether baited or not. Glue traps can be effectively used in some situations.

Chemical Control: Toxic baiting. In landscaped areas or backyard gardens, rodenticide baits having a generalized label wording that lists mice and commensal rodents as target pests can be used with discretion to control meadow voles. Tamper-resistant bait stations should be used for application of anticoagulant baits at ground level, and these are best placed along vole runways or next to burrows. The same bait stations will also prove useful in controlling resident populations of house mice and deer mice. Alternatively, seed baits and small pellet baits can be placed deep into the meadow vole nest access burrows.

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Meadow Vole Solutions
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