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Rodenticides: Background & Hazards <br />Rats and mice have been living with humans for centuries, and humans have been working for just <br />as long to keep them at bay. Rodents such as gophers, moles, voles, and squirrels are also viewed <br />as pests in some settings. <br />Poisons have been used as rodent -control measures for many years. Before the 1940s, rodenticides <br />contained heavy metals such as arsenic and thallium or poisons such as strychnine and red squill. <br />Most of these chemicals are no longer used as rodenticides with the exception of strychnine, which <br />is currently registered for use only below -ground as a bait application to control pocket gophers. For <br />more details, see US EPA's RED Facts on Strychnine. <br />In the 1940s and 1950s, the first kind of anticoagulant rodenticides known as first -generation <br />rodenticides were developed. This class of rodenticides work by disrupting the normal blood clotting <br />or coagulation process so that dosed individuals or animals suffer from uncontrolled bleeding or <br />hemorrhaging. Anticoagulant rodenticides that are in wide use today are members of a more potent <br />class of anticoagulants known as second -generation rodenticides. The following section provides a <br />more detailed comparison between first and second generation rodenticides. <br />Other rodenticides are non -anticoagulants and work in different ways. Non -anticoagulant <br />rodenticides in use include bromethalin, cholecalciferol, and zinc phosphide. <br />Using rodenticides for control is frequently the cause of unintended consequences, from the stench <br />of rodents decomposing in the walls to poisonings of non -target organisms. Primary poisoning can <br />result from wild birds, pets, or even children eating baited rodenticides, while secondary poisoning of <br />birds and mammals (including dogs and cats) can accompany the ingestion of poisoned rodents. <br />nticoagulant Rodenticides <br />First -Generation Anticoagulants <br />First -generation anticoagulant rodenticides listed in the table below require rodents to consume the <br />bait for several consecutive feedings for delivery of a lethal dose. There are three US EPA - <br />registered first -generation rodenticides, including warfarin (also used as an anti -clotting drug for <br />coronary artery disease), chlorophacinone, and diphacinone. The first -generation compounds are <br />excreted fairly rapidly by mammals, usually within a week. However, the use of any rodenticides <br />pose a poisoning risk to children, pets and wildlife. <br />First -Generation <br />Rodenticides <br />Chlorophacinone <br />Diphacinone <br />Anticoagulant, <br />multiple dose <br />treatment <br />Acute Oral <br />Toxicity <br />Primary Poisoning Risk <br />High Low (birds and mammals) <br />Anticoagulant, High Low (birds and mammals) <br />multiple dose <br />treatment <br />Secondary <br />Poisoning Risk <br />L,ow (birds), High <br />(mammals) <br />Moderate (birds), <br />l-ligh (mammals) <br />