Ground Squirrel Management
Protecting Your Investment
Ground squirrels are notorious for causing massive damage to farms and landscaped areas. Once the population gets big enough, they can cause damage to crops and even infrastructure. It’s important to manage the population throughout the year before they become established on a property. Poisoning ground squirrels as control can cause widespread problems because of their place in the food chain. Our management methods involve year round observation and treatment without live trapping or poisons.
Prolific & Destructive
24/7 Abatement
Our team uses the most advanced and humane rodent dispatching equipment on the market from Goodnature. The equipment self-resets after every humane dispatch. This provides our clients with consistent service, around the clock without disruption.
Trackable Data
Our equipment keeps track of every rodent that is humanely dispatched. This data provides our clients with tangible results and helps us monitor the unique needs of each property.
Discrete
California hosts a robust rodent population, but our clients don’t want to be reminded of that every day. We appreciate the need for discretion in our industry. We camouflage our equipment into your landscape for discrete service, unseen by clientele and guests.
Eco-Supportive & Humane
Poison Free
Our trapping system is 100% green. Most conventional methods used today cause secondary poisoning to local wildlife. That is why we choose to not use these tools. Each client we serve helps reduce the amount of rodenticide poisoning in our community.
Clean Scavenging
All rodents humanely dispatched by our equipment provide local wildlife with poison-free scavenging. This method supports the natural ecosystem. When natural predators stay healthy, they will also help to reduce the rodent population. Irrefutable evidence demonstrates that many animals are affected by rodenticide poisons.
Humane Standard
The trapping system by Goodnature has been tested and stated as humane by international welfare standards cited in Morriss and Warburton. We support a higher standard of wildlife interaction by not using inhumane methods (such as poison or glue traps) when interacting with wildlife. Humane efficacy study for the US can be found here: USDA








