Preference of Escaped Mice for Live Capture or Glue Traps and Relevance to Pest Control Programs

Author:

Schoenberger Jenna M1,Prendergast Brian J2,Luchins Kerith R1,Theriault Betty R1,Langan George P1

Affiliation:

1. Animal Resources Center and Department of Surgery, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois

2. Department of Psychology, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois

Abstract

Insects are potential disease vectors for research animals. Therefore, implementing an effective pest control program is an essential component of any animal care and use program. The Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals emphasizes the humane use of traps; however, insect traps commonly use glue that can entrap escaped research mice, leading to their potential distress and injury. This situation is challenging for research facilities attempting to identify insect populations. In an effort to improve pest control in animal facilities, we sought to characterize the behavioral interactions of mice with common vermin traps. Three experiments using different combinations of traps (glue trap, live mouse trap with a clear viewing window, and live mouse trap with a red-tinted viewing window) were used in multiple behavioral testing arenas to address these questions. Experiments 1 and 2 were performed in a small arena, and Experiment 3 was performed in a simulated mouse housing room. Dependent measures included exploration of the test environment, grooming behavior, time spent near each trap, and latency to capture. Results indicate that mice were captured significantly more quickly by live traps than by glue traps, and were far more likely to enter a live trap as compared with a glue trap. Mice did not appear to differentiate between clear or red-tinted window live traps. Taken together, the results indicate that deploying both a live trap and a glue trap will allow humane capture of escaped mice yet will also capture insects in the same environment.

Publisher

American Association for Laboratory Animal Science

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology

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