Animals (Mar 2021)

Monitoring and Controlling House Mouse, <i>Mus musculus domesticus</i>, Infestations in Low-Income Multi-Family Dwellings

  • Shannon Sked,
  • Salehe Abbar,
  • Richard Cooper,
  • Robert Corrigan,
  • Xiaodan Pan,
  • Sabita Ranabhat,
  • Changlu Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani11030648
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 3
p. 648

Abstract

Read online

The house mouse, Mus musculus domesticus, is a common pest in multi-family residential apartment buildings. This study was designed to gain insights into residents’ impressions of house mice, develop more effective house mouse detection methods, and evaluate the effectiveness of building-wide house mouse management programs. Two high-rise apartment buildings in New Jersey were selected for this study during 2019–2020. Bait stations with three different non-toxic baits were used to detect house mouse activity. Two rodenticides (FirstStrike®—0.0025% difethialone and Contrac®—0.005% bromadiolone) were applied by researchers over a 63-day period and pest control operations were then returned to pest control contractors for rodent management. There were significant differences in the consumption rates of non-toxic baits and two toxic baits tested. A novel non-toxic bait, chocolate spread, was much more sensitive than the two commercial non-toxic baits for detecting mouse activity. The house mouse management programs resulted in an average 87% reduction in the number of infested apartments after three months. At 12 months, the number of infestations decreased by 94% in one building, but increased by 26% in the second building. Sustainable control of house mouse infestations requires the use of effective monitoring strategies and control programs coupled with preventative measures.

Keywords