British Columbia's new restrictions on the use of certain rodent poisons may be having an unintended side effect, amid reports of growing rat and mouse populations. As of Jan. 31, B.C. permanently banned the sale and use of a class of poisons known as second-generation anti-coagulants, with an exception for certain sectors deemed "essential services," like food production or health-care facilities. The move is an extension of an 18-month ban first implemented in 2021, which followed advocacy by conservationists who said the rodenticides were killing owls, along with some other raptors and predators that eat rats and mice. 4:58 Looking at long-term and cooperative ways to manage the rat population "We were noticing a lot of animals were being secondarily poisoned by rodenticide...
Published February 20, 2024 by PETA Foundation . Last Updated April 2, 2024. 4 min read Written by Dana Peer Levis. Meet Ratty, the avocado-loving rodent who nibbled his way into my life and taught my family a valuable lesson about the importance of humane traps. After finding his way into our home through holes in the wall behind our washing machine, Ratty quickly made a reputation for himself as an avocado thief. Curious and crafty, he managed to evade my makeshift humane traps, locating a new avocado every day and leaving behind the bread and peanut butter we had left out for him. Not everyone was satisfied with my attempts to remove Ratty from my home humanely. Our landlord, who brought in a "pest" control team to seal off the walls, tried to give us cruel glue traps—but I knew better than to use those horrible, torturous devices. Glue traps are among the cruelest methods of killing animals. Any small animal who walks across or lands on one become...
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