Mice and Rat Glue Books-Discontinued

The mice and rat glue books open up like a book and may be closed without harming the glue interior. These unique rodent glue boards may be folded in various ways, allowing flexibility for placement. The rat glue book may be folded so that you can place it against the wall or even folded into a "tunnel". These glue boards or "glue books", have a strong placement of sticky glue which provides a secure catch. The mouse sized glue book has hazard markings around it for increased visibility.To get more news about Rat Glue Book, you can visit senpinghz.com official website.

Rat glue book order are finished for loading, the rat glue book is customized with color, size and glue weight. Before order, customer have strictly testing for sample provided, it took around 6 months, finally our sample get approval from their management team, and placed mass order, Now 20000pcs rat glue board are finished in 15days, customer are very happy for our production time. they said will place more orders once receive.A new study reveals that common methods of rat control often ignore basic animal welfare issues. Experts in pest control, animal welfare, and veterinary medicine explored the impact that different methods of rodent control have on rat welfare to better aid decision-making. Their work has just been published in the article: ‘An assessment of animal welfare impacts in wild Norway rat (Rattus norvegicus) management’.
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Many millions of rats and mice are estimated to be killed globally as pests every year. Two commonly used methods are glue traps (which are designed to catch rodents in a layer of extremely strong glue) and anticoagulant poisons (which interfere with blood clotting, killing rats through haemorrhaging). Rats are sentient animals (capable of experiencing negative and positive feelings) and yet both glue traps and anticoagulants can lead to extreme suffering.
Where possible, any suffering should be minimised in rat control, however, until now, very little information has been available on the relative animal welfare impacts of methods currently being used in the UK. This has made it difficult to select the methods which cause the least impact on rat welfare.

NRI’s professor of rats, Steve Belmain, was part of a group of experts in wildlife management, rodent management, rodent biology, animal welfare science, and veterinary science and medicine, who assessed the relative welfare impacts of six different methods of rodent control.Methods included: lethal snap trapping; glue trapping, followed by concussive killing (a concussive blow to the head); live (cage) trapping, followed by concussive killing; two types of rodenticide poisoning (anticoagulant and cholecalciferol); and non-toxic cellulose baiting (disrupting digestive systems and resulting in lethal dehydration).