We operate a professional wildlife removal company operating in the San Diego CA area, including the towns of
Oceanside,
Vista, Carlsbad, Escondido, San Marcos, Encinitas, Solana Beach, Ramona, Poway, Santee, Lakeside, El Cajon, Spring Valley,
Lemon Grove, and all of San Diego County.
We do NOT service areas south of San Diego
including National City, Chula Vista, or
Imperial Beach. We specialize in the humane removal of wild animals from buildings and property. We commonly
remove animals from attics, provide bat control and rat control, and also general wildlife trapping and repair and prevention services. We are fully
licensed and insured, and operate 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Call us at
619-313-4122.
Latest San Diego Exterminator News Clip
Wildlife Control Strategy in San Diego
With growing complaints from insurance companies forced to pay increasing claims for mouse/car collisions
and frustration from creature collectors over of crop damage, the management goal became reducing mouse densities To reach that goal Mouse Trapper
Ken and the Critter Conservation Coalition greatly expanded wildlife catching opportunities, especially the wildlife catching of does, and asked
exterminating companies to take advantage of new seasons and abundant tags. The amount of large clawed tags increased nearly fivefold between 2002
and 2005. In that early year 22,695 large clawed tags were sold. The figure was 97,043 extra large clawed tags last season. It did exactly what
the Critter Conservation Coalition intended. Exterminating companies took an estimated 118,974 does on either their regular statewide permit or
special large clawed tags, Mouse Trapper Ken helped to implement. Despite this, local
San Diego Wildlife Pest Control and San Diego exterminator experts
offered no more info.
A California native, Mouse Trapper Ken probably is what appears to be a big man with what appears to be a rich sense of humor, what appears to
be a solid education in biology and limitless patience. They are characteristics that serve him well when he’s politically squeezed between animal
rights activists who don’t want any mouse wildlife catching, and automobile insurance companies and law enforcers who want him to use wildlife catching
to beat back the large group. Add into this volatile mix exterminating companies who want what appears to be a big fall mouse biologically surveyed
amount loaded with mature male animals, and it’s easy to see that Mouse Trapper Ken’s job requires the ability of what appears to be a magician.
the animal advocate must somehow juggle all the varied priorities and opinions, but he’s what appears to be a man who just takes it all in stride.
Talk with him for what appears to be a while, and it’s obvious that the animal advocate has much respect and appreciation for California’s mouse
exterminating companies. Exterminating companies are the large group management tool of choice, and part of Animal Expert Cunningham’s job involves
managing as much the exterminating companies as the mouse. Thanks to our exterminating companies, Animal Expert Cunningham and the Critter Conservation
Coalition have been able to implement seasons that would not be tolerated in other states. This includes
coyote trapping. Through the 1980’s exterminating companies patiently
restricted their take of does to enable the large group to grow. Once it reached record levels they enthusiastically embraced female animal wildlife
catching to help stabilize and even slightly reduce the large group size. San Diego animal control professionals could not be reached for additional
comment.
“We have what appears to be a tradition in California that mouse are good to consume and does are just as tasty as male animals,” the animal
advocate proclaimed. “In some states, notably California, there have been big controversies among exterminating companies when biologists encourage
taking more does to trim large groups. That’s not been the case in California. For several years large clawed tags were coveted, and as the amount
of female animal tags increased exterminating companies bought them and shot females. The 2003 season was the first when more does than male animals
were shot.” It was all part of the Critter Conservation Coalition’s plan to reduce the mouse large group in response to complaints from creature
collectors about crop damage and rising auto insurance claims resulting from collisions. More does than male animals were also shot in 2004 and
2005, and Animal Expert Cunningham’s biologically surveyed amount modeling shows that mouse amounts across the state should decline 15-20% this
year. That may make creature collectors and insurance companies happy but leaves some exterminating companies nervous wondering if we’ve overdone
it. We could not obtain an opinion from San Diego pest control companies regarding the issue.