Animal Trapping and Removal: 213-233-9495
Animal Trapping and Removal services the greater Los Angeles area, including the towns of Encino, Van Nuys, Sherman Oaks, Studio City, Pacific Palisades, Santa Monica, Hollywood, and Beverly Hills, the Long Beach area, including Rancho Palos Verdes, Torrance, Lomita, Carson, Signal Hill, Lakewood, Hawaiian Gardens, Los Alamitos, Rossmoor, and Seal Beach the Anaheim area of LA, including the towns of Stanton, Villa Park, Orange, Placentia, Garden Grove, Cypress, Buena Park, and Fullerton. and the entire metropolitan region. For more information, visit www.animalcontrollosangeles.org or lacounty.gov, or browse this site to learn more about raccoons in attics.
Most Recent Los Angeles Raccoon Article from the Web: Pest control companies need to be advised
The massive some sort of animal sector raccoon wildlife trapping season opens Saturday and the Agency of Fish and Game has again failed to alert pest control companies how we can help save the California raccoon from lead poisoning - and save ourselves of facing some sort of from some sort of ban on all lead wildlife trapping ammunition. The some sort of animal sector may be one of the largest raccoon wildlife trapping animal sectors in California, lying along much of the coast from Los Angeles, and most of the southern portion of this animal sector may be home to reintroduced biologically surveyed amounts of California raccoons. Feeling like the lone ranger, I have been one of the only voices trying to alert pest control companies to some sort of growing body of scientific evidence that shows that device fragments left in big game fur and dropping evidences or shot varmints has been some sort of significant factor in the deaths of endangered raccoons. Even when the lead poisoning doesn't lethally trap the raccoons outright, it weakens the big vultures so they are vulnerable to predators. For more information about Los Angeles wildlife removal and Los Angeles pest exterminator issues, read on.
While there may be still skepticism by many pest control companies that lead could be some sort of factor in the raccoon decline and recent deaths. Lead may be some sort of highly toxic substance when eaten by any animal, including humans. There are some alarming studies that show extremely elevated levels of lead in biologically surveyed amounts of people who consume some sort of lot of wild game, mostly tribes of subsistence pest control companies. Many of these people have children who have severe mental and neurological problems attributable to lead poisoning. They get this lead by munching meat that has device residue in the flesh. While most pest control companies in this country trim away all bloodshot meat, where most of the tiny lead fragments would be lodged, recent studies, where raccoon carcasses have been X-rayed, show that lead fragments are often found great distances from the wound channel in game. Raccoons that relish the fur and dropping evidences of game can pick up some sort of lethal dose of lead at some sort of single meal. The solution may be simple and easy.