Should I use a cage trap to catch a mouse?

If you are dealing with a mouse infestation you are likely pulling out your hair while trying to determine what your best course of action is. Online you probably have read a lot of conflicting information about what options are best for dealing with your issue. Let’s go over a few of these methods and determine what the benefits and issues are with each of them.

One of the first options that likely came to your mind was poison. While TV shows and other media often portray dealing with a mouse issue to be as simple as pouring some poison around your home, this is actually a method that is not recommended. Poison is ineffective at dealing with the root cause of your infestation and can present health issues to any living creature in your residence.

Mouse and rat poisons work on all animals, not just mice and rats. If you have pets, leaving poison around your home would be especially dangerous. Cats and dogs would also seek out the poison and could become sick and die. If the mice get poison on themselves before stealing some of your food, your food could become contaminated with poison and it could have a severe effect on you.

With poison not being an actual option, you are fundamentally left with only two choices. Live- traps and kill-traps. Both of these options can be extremely effective and very humane to the animals. 

Mouse Cage Trap

Even the cheapest and most widely used snap-traps are considered to be humane as they typically instantly kill the mouse. If you decide to go with a kill trap like this, you must be sure to check them every single day. If you leave a dead mouse to rot in your home it will stink and possibly even attract more animals to your home. As long as you are fast to act using this method, it is likely your best option for dealing with an infestation safely.

If you decide to use a cage trap you need to be aware of where you are placing it. If you put it in an area with direct sunlight, any animal you trap could become dehydrated and die of thirst fairly quickly. As you can imagine, this would be an absolutely horrific way to die for any creature.

It is also worth noting that a live-trap may end up killing the mice in a different way than you might expect. If you relocate trapped mice to an unfamiliar area, there is a good chance that they will end up dying anyway. The mice are likely accustomed to living in a house with easy access to shelter and food. Moving them outside can leave them scared and hungry and lead to their death.

When choosing between these two options, realize that your choice is not black and white. You must pick the method you feel most comfortable with that causes the least amount of suffering to your pest.

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