Hi all,

I’m personally against glue traps for a rodent problem (mice mainly); I feel 
they’re very cruel, and not totally effective because I find a lot of times 
mice actually get unstuck (unless they fall over on it and get stuck in the 
glue over most of their body and not just their feet/tails and then I have to 
find the sometimes still alive mouse and figure out my plan from there— not my 
favorite thing, obvi); I also feel they almost immediately lose stickiness and 
have to be diligently replaced every 1-2 days (sometimes problematic when staff 
who check are not there all week or just not checking diligently). 

My actual questions are:

Are glue traps the accepted method for catching mice/small rodents in 
buildings? This is not in a collection area (yet) but in offices of staff both 
collection and education and can at times have collection items in offices. 

Does anyone have specific wording (perhaps in their IPM plan) that says why/why 
not use glue traps for catching mice; this would against a facilities dept that 
doesn’t really want to hear other methods on this unless there is clear museum 
IPM precedence not in favor of glue traps. I’m in favor of classic snap traps, 
multi-kill traps, even the ole bucket with rolling log/walk the plank traps 
(shoutout to Shawn Woods on youtube who tests and reviews mousetraps). 

Thanks for any thoughts or advice,

~christine

christine m.a. marzano
www.christinemamarzano.com
(631)312.6559

Pronouns: She/Her
(what’s this? https://www.mypronouns.org/) 
Why I include pronouns in my email signature

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