Pest Expert Formula ‘B+’ Advanced Rat & Mouse Killer Poison 3kg (30 x 100g) - Strongest Maximum Strength - Single Feed Brodifacoum

£10.8
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Pest Expert Formula ‘B+’ Advanced Rat & Mouse Killer Poison 3kg (30 x 100g) - Strongest Maximum Strength - Single Feed Brodifacoum

Pest Expert Formula ‘B+’ Advanced Rat & Mouse Killer Poison 3kg (30 x 100g) - Strongest Maximum Strength - Single Feed Brodifacoum

RRP: £21.60
Price: £10.8
£10.8 FREE Shipping

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Great product got rid of my unwanted visitors almost immediately! What else can I say other than I highly recommend it and pest expert's service

Our Pest Expert Rat Killer Poison contains maximum strength Brodifacoum(0.0029%), which is 4 times stronger than Bromadiolone and 6 times stronger than Difenacoum – the actives found in most other rat poisons. So you can be confident that it is the strongest and most effective rat poison you can buy. Inert gas killing of burrowing pest animals is another method with no impact on scavenging wildlife. One such method has been commercialized and sold under the brand name Rat Ice. Excellent service I would certainly use this company again. Communication were good and fast delivery. It seems to have worked and no more rats around. It certainly attracted them as we stored it in the shed overnight and the rats found a hole to get in and started on the box immediately. The products were delivered promptly. The poison has been eaten by the rats straightaway and after 3 days no more is being taken!

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For use only in areas that are inaccessible to infants, children, companion animals and non-target animals. Metal phosphides have been used as a means of killing rodents and are considered single-dose fast acting rodenticides (death occurs commonly within 1–3 days after single bait ingestion). A bait consisting of food and a phosphide (usually zinc phosphide) is left where the rodents can eat it. The acid in the digestive system of the rodent reacts with the phosphide to generate toxic phosphine gas. This method of vermin control has possible use in places where rodents are resistant to some of the anticoagulants, particularly for control of house and field mice; zinc phosphide baits are also cheaper than most second-generation anticoagulants, so that sometimes, in the case of large infestation by rodents, their population is initially reduced by copious amounts of zinc phosphide bait applied, and the rest of population that survived the initial fast-acting poison is then eradicated by prolonged feeding on anticoagulant bait. Inversely, the individual rodents that survived anticoagulant bait poisoning (rest population) can be eradicated by pre-baiting them with nontoxic bait for a week or two (this is important to overcome bait shyness, and to get rodents used to feeding in specific areas by specific food, especially in eradicating rats) and subsequently applying poisoned bait of the same sort as used for pre-baiting until all consumption of the bait ceases (usually within 2–4 days). These methods of alternating rodenticides with different modes of action gives actual or almost 100% eradications of the rodent population in the area, if the acceptance/palatability of baits are good (i.e., rodents feed on it readily). Brilliant product! Pest-Expert never disappoint. They always deliver the best products and this paste bait was great!

Rats can carry an array of diseases that can pass to humans, including Leptospirosis or Weil’s disease, Salmonella, Listeria, Toxoplasma gondii and Hantavirus, and can cause fires by gnawing through electrical cables. In fact, according to the British Pest Control Association via research carried out by the insurance sector, it is estimated that rodent damage to wiring is responsible for 25% of all electrical fires in buildings. Write an online review and share your thoughts with other shoppers! Reviewer: Lynn wells from NottinghamOne of the potential problems when using rodenticides is that dead or weakened rodents may be eaten by other wildlife, either predators or scavengers. Members of the public deploying rodenticides may not be aware of this or may not follow the product's instructions closely enough. There is evidence of secondary poisoning being caused by exposure to prey. [3] Alberta, Canada, through a combination of climate and control, is also believed to be rat-free. [27] See also [ edit ]

Sometimes, anticoagulant rodenticides are potentiated by an antibiotic or bacteriostatic agent, most commonly sulfaquinoxaline. The aim of this association is that the antibiotic suppresses intestinal symbiotic microflora, which are a source of vitamin K. Diminished production of vitamin K by the intestinal microflora contributes to the action of anticoagulants. Added vitamin D also has a synergistic effect with anticoagulants. Difenacoum was the first of the second generation anticoagulants introduced to the UK in the early 1970s. The reason for its development was due to nationwide resistance to Warfarin and the need to create an alternative poison. It is still a good quality rodenticideand one we recommendfor use as an alternative, following the initial use of Bromadiolonerat poison products

a b "Rodenticide manufacturer defies EPA, requests hearing on anticoagulant use". Archived from the original on 12 January 2014 . Retrieved 4 April 2015. We discovered an exceptionally FAT rat coming into our garden and somehow climbed up into our bird seed feeder.



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