The current mouse infestation across western NSW is a natural occurrence,' a spokeswoman said.
'NSW Health staff are responding with appropriate control measures.'
NSW
 Western Area Health Service has also reported a case of leptospirosis -
 a rare disease which can cause kidney failure and meningitis - as a 
result of mice in domestic dwellings.   
This month Melanie Moeris, from Gilgandra, shared footage of hundreds of mice scurrying over machinery on her family's farm. 
She later took to Facebook to write: 'This is exactly what nightmares are made of! I can't even watch the videos.'   
One
 resident, Lisa Gore, from Toowoomba, said her friend had found a nest 
of baby mice in her armchair while another person Karen Fox, from Dubbo,
 said said found a mouse in the ceiling vent of her home, The Guardian 
reports. 
Meanwhile shopkeeper Naav Singh who works 
at 5Star supermarket in Gulargambone, said he was now arriving to his 
store five hours before opening to clean up after the mice and sweep 
their droppings.
Mr Singh, who had now 
reduced his stock to prevent items being destroyed by the rodents, 
claimed on some nights staff were catching 'over 4000 or 500' rodents.
He
 told The Guardian: 'We don't want to go inside in the morning 
sometimes. It stinks, they will die and it's impossible to find all the 
bodies … Some nights we are catching over 400 or 500.'
He added: 'We have got five or six bins every week just filled with groceries that we are throwing out.' 
This
 month Louise Hennessy discovered dozens of rodents in ger water tank 
filter at her property at Elong Elong in the New South Wales central 
west - a region where mice have been ravaging crops.  
Ms
 Hennessey posted an image of the dead mice and clumps of fur tangled in
 the filter to social media as health authorities begged locals to take 
precautions to protect themselves against the potentially fatal disease 
leptospirosis amid fears that the rodents could infect the drinking 
water being supplied to local residents.
The mice plague is not just affecting 
residents' health, but their livelihoods and NSW Farmers is now seeking 
urgent action from the government as the mice plague continues to 
decimate crops and destroy stored hay.
President
 James Jackson said grain growers hold grave concerns about the winter 
crop planting season, which is due to start within weeks.
'Farmers
 need some more control options. We are requesting that an Emergency Use
 Permit be issued for Zinc Phosphide to treat seed,' Mr Jackson said on 
Wednesday.
'This will allow farmers to 
have their own grain professionally treated, removing the biosecurity 
risks posed by using foreign seed.
'It 
will also reduce the cost of sourcing sterilised or de-vitalised grain 
by farmers using their own treated seed to be sown for winter cropping.'
NSW Farmers is also seeking some financial assistance through a small grants program.
'Mouse
 control is very costly. The severity of the current plague has resulted
 in the need for multiple aerial and ground bait applications in 
cropping regions,' Mr Jackson said.
'Potential options we are putting up 
include a rebate on rodenticide products or a subsidy for ground and 
aerial baiting. Action is needed now. This mice situation is only 
getting worse.'
Rodent numbers have 
exploded just as rural communities across New South Wales and Queensland
 were recovering from droughts and fields were beginning to return to 
green.
Favourable crop-growing 
conditions in recent months have provided the rodents with the ideal 
environment for eating and breeding. 
In
 Coonamble, about two hours north of Dubbo, resident Anne Cullen said 
mice were running rampant across the town - and she even woke up with 
one in her hair. 
'It's terrible. It's 
unbelievable. I came home after a couple of nights away staying down in 
Dubbo with my daughter, and I went into the house, there were just mice 
running everywhere,' she told the Today show.
'They have eaten my clothes. They have gotten into my wardrobe. There are holes in the couches. They are eating everything.'
In
 an attempt to reduce their numbers, she now dumps $250 worth of rodent 
poison around her sheds and sets water traps before the mice emerge in 
the evenings.
She said farmers in the town were having to burn crops that weren't safely stored in silos because of contamination.
'The
 hay is a worry. Apparently, the mouse droppings and the urine all 
through, it's very damaging. It can disease cattle. It might be 
ruined.' 
As mouse dropping deteriorate in dry climates they become airborne. Inhaling the dropping can cause hantavirus a deadly disease mainly found in New Mexico.
ReplyDeleteClearly they need more cats, hawks and owls.
ReplyDelete