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James Mason (970)219-2757 |


Sales and Service |



Prairie Dog and Burrowing Pest Elimination Using |
Prairie Dog and burrowing pest elimination. Poison Free and Environmentally Friendly No Pesticides Or Poisons such as: Cyanide, Strychnine, Warfarin, Fumarin, Fiphacinone, Rozol, or Fluoride. All proven deadly to Raptors, Humans and Pets. Environmentally Clean and does not spread to other animals, such as pets, cattle, birds, or people. Targets only animals in the critters hole, such as Rattle Snakes or Rodents. Only leaves a small carbon dioxide foot print and a collapsed hole. Help prevent the spread of Bubonic and Pneumonic Plague. These diseases are spread by fleas that inhabit and infect Prairie Dog Towns and then bite pets or humans. We use a mixture of Propane and Oxygen injected into the rodents burrow and ignited, causing a concussive force that exterminates the critter instantly and in most cases collapses the burrow system, thus burying the rodent and the plague carrying fleas where they can do no harm to Humans or other wildlife. Propane is heavier than air so it sinks into the burrow system, and ignites safely underground. Some home hobbyist have attempted to use their Oxy/Acetylene torches to blow up the burrows. This is EXTREMELY dangerous. Acetylene is unstable and lighter than air. It will rise out of the burrows, and when ignited, will explode with a large fire ball which will cause prairie fires and INJURIES to the persons in the area. Please, do not attempt to use these gases. We use specifically designed equipment with regulators, gases, injectors, and igniters intended for this use. |
Rick Mason (970)290-4574 James Mason (970)219-2757 |
Colorado & Southern Wyoming |
All holes are detonated and closed then we return the next day to inspect them to assure that they stay closed, which ensures that all varmints are elimated. |
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Feds say white-tailed prairie dogs not endangered: DENVER - The high-altitude cousin of the black-tailed prairie dog has also been denied federal protection. The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service announced Thursday that the white-tailed prairie dog does not merit protection under the Endangered Species Act. The agency reached the same conclusion in December for the species' better-known cousin, the black-tailed prairie dog. The white-tailed prairie dog is found at altitudes above 5,000 feet in Colorado, Wyoming, Utah and Montana. The black-tailed prairie dog is found on lower grasslands in at least 11 Central and Western states. The two species are similar but distinct. Both are in the squirrel family. Federal wildlife authorities said the white-tailed prairie dog population "has not substantially changed" and that the critter doesn't face significant threat from urbanization or energy development in the region. The Fish & Wildlife Service said white-tailed prairie dogs could be affected by habitat loss and urbanization, especially in Colorado. But the agency concluded urbanization "is not considered a range-wide threat." Officials with the agency's Mountain-Prairie Region said scientists aren't sure exactly how many white-tailed prairie dogs there are but their range is significant and not shrinking. Wyoming alone has about 2.9 million acres thought to include white-tailed prairie dogs. "Large acreages of occupied habitat exist across the species' range," wildlife officials concluded. The review came after at least three wildlife groups challenged whether the prairie dogs deserved protection. The Denver-based Center for Native Ecosystems has been pushing for protection for the animals since 2002. The group's staff biologist, Erin Robertson, said Thursday that federal wildlife managers didn't do enough research to conclude that prairie dogs don't need protection. Robertson was especially critical of the agency's acknowledged lack of data about prairie dogs and oil and gas drilling. "Sage brush lands are being drilled left and right, and no one is looking at how important species like the white-tailed prairie dogs are being affected," Robertson said after reading the decision. Wildlife manager said that white-tailed prairie dogs, like their lowland cousins, are susceptible to plague. But Fish & Wildlife biologists pointed out that the white-tailed prairie dogs have persisted despite some 70 years of exposure to the disease. The white-tailed prairie dogs are more resistant to poisoning than their lowland cousins because the population is more spread out, managers concluded. The decision was praised by Republican Sen. John Barrasso of Wyoming, who said in a statement Thursday that an endangered designation for white-tailed prairie dogs would have burdened ranchers. |