Legislation to be considered in the N.H. Statehouse next year would place restrictions on a type of rat poison known as second-generation anticoagulant rodenticide.
Rep. Nicholas Germana, D-Keene, is a co-sponsor on a bill that would limit access to these chemicals to professionally licensed applicators.
This type of rodenticide stays in a rodentโs system longer than previous types. It kills by preventing the animalโs blood from clotting, so it bleeds to death.
โWhat happens is that raptors eat these mice, eat these rodents, and there is significant evidence that there is impact on our raptor population,โ Germana said in a recent interview.
โIf somebody were to use these chemicals on their own property and a neighborhood dog or cat were to eat an infected mouse, or whatever, it could also have an impact on any animal.โ
N.H. Audubon has a warning on its website:
โUse of anticoagulant poisons, especially second-generation anticoagulant rodenticides (SGARs) often result in secondary poisoning of native wildlife, including hawks, owls, eagles, bobcats, fishers, foxes, and other predators.โ
Two years ago, the N.H. Legislature killed a bill to prohibit use of this type of rodenticide, except in certain cases.
Germana said the bill to be considered next year would restrict but not prohibit their use.
โRats adapt quickly to other options,โ he said. โThey are incredibly smart, incredibly adaptive animals. The argument is that it has to be available in some cases.โ
The bill is aimed at addressing concerns that people might use these rodenticides when other prevention or eradication methods less harmful to wildlife could be used instead.
Other ways of limiting rodent populations include rat or mouse traps, natural repellents, habitat management such as cleaning up debris and trimming vegetation, as well as sealing up points of entry into structures.
The measure will be considered next year by the N.H. House Environment and Agriculture Committee.
Germana, who is a member of the committee, said there appears to be bipartisan agreement that this type of bill would be preferable to a more restrictive ban on this rodenticide.
The exact wording of the bill hasnโt been published yet, but the earlier bill that didnโt advance classified second-generation rodenticides as those containing brodifacoum, bromadiolone, difenacoum or difethialone.
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