Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. This fall, you might find some tiny creatures stirring inside your house. They’ll probably be house mice. In speaking with an ...
You first might hear a small scuttle. Then you'll notice a few packages of food have been gnawed open. Before you know it, you scream when you finally see the mouse that has invaded your house. At ...
No one wants to deal with mice, or rats, or any icky combination of those in your home. Especially when you have kids. So ...
So, you have a mouse in your house? Despite our best efforts, these rodents can sometimes find their way in and can be more difficult to track down than other pests. If you notice mice scurrying ...
Temperatures are dropping, snow is falling, and you've probably turned on your home's heat to make things more comfortable. As a result, you may find you have some unwanted guests, namely mice, hoping ...
Mice often try to overwinter in the warm indoors of a home; they get in through gaps and doors. Mice can also climb high and far, entering through the roof, plumbing, or stowed away in boxes. They are ...
Talk to almost anyone in pest control and you’ll immediately detect their begrudging respect for mice. They are “so adaptable,” says Matthew Frye, an educator with the New York State Integrated Pest ...
Dusty barns, gleaming stables and damp basements. These are all places where you might find a house mouse—or a member of my research team. Cities are hotter and they have a lot of people living in ...
New research suggests some urban rodents may not only be surviving pest control efforts, but even genetically adapting to ...
This fall, you might find some tiny creatures stirring inside your house. They’ll probably be house mice. In speaking with an expert — Michael Cove, research curator of mammalogy for the NC Museum of ...