Whether a little mouse like creature startled you by scurrying through your yard or you found evidence of tunneling learning to identify moles shrews and voles is the first step in dealing with.
Evidence of voles in yard.
There may be burrows and tunnels in your yard that are no longer active.
It s important to place the stations where there is positive evidence of current vole activity.
The following systematic search procedure will help you identify the current area of activity.
Although mature voles only reach five to seven inches long they can still upend a yard by feeding on vegetation and kicking up dirt roots and grass.
Yet evidence of the pests presence is unmistakable.
If you ve never actually seen a vole it s not surprising.
Some are commonly called meadow mice or pine mice.
Voles leave unmistakable scars in your yard called runs or runways grassless depressions crisscrossing your yard like little sidewalks leading to and from their burrow openings.
Voles will often use abandoned tunnels left behind by moles.
Their tunnels are usually at least ten inches underground unless they re scanning the surface in search of a mate.
Moles are beneficial in many ways.
Unlike vegetarian voles moles dig deep.
Essential step in vole control the apple sign test.
The only visible evidence of a vole burrow is the neat exit holes an inch or two across.
Voles construct well defined visible tunnels or runways at or near the surface about two inches wide.
Voles may travel through mole tunnels but also dig their own burrows.
Aside from setting eyes on the animals those runway systems are how you know you ve got voles.
Voles are largely a winter problem.
Voles are small mammals that are active both above and underneath the ground.
Voles similar to other rodents have a mainly vegetarian diet.
Check your soil and lawn for their tunnels.
The 7 inch long rodent also known as a meadow mouse is rather shy.
A quick description of voles voles are rodents and are primarily herbivores causing extensive damage to small trees and plants and bulbs.
They will look like raised volcano shaped swellings in your yard.
Moles have a mainly carnivorous diet.
Voles are rodents that look very similar to hamsters but they live in the wild and can do a lot of damage to trees lawns and gardens.
Like moles shrews and mice voles pose their own unique pest issues.