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Professional Wildlife Removal and Animal Pest Control Serving Portland Oregon

Portland Pest Control & Wildlife Removal

Call us: 503-406-1422 for wildlife help.

Professional Wildlife Removal: We operate in greater Portland, OR and Multnomah County and specialize in nuisance wildlife control. If you need mouse or rat control in Portland, we offer a complete solution with full guarantee on our work. We commonly deal with problems such as raccoons in attics, squirrels in the ceiling, rats in the walls, snake removal and control, bat control, and more. We are the best Portland extermination company available when it comes to wild animals.

  • Fully Licensed & Insured
  • Residential & Commercial
  • 24/7 Emergency Service
  • Over Ten Years of Experience
  • In the Greater Portland area
  • Call - 503-406-1422
 

Visit our dedicated Portland Critter Removal Site: Portland Pest Animal Control for more Portland OR animal removal info. We also service Vancouver Washington.

All of our wildlife trapping is performed in a humane manner. We never intend to harm any wildlife only to safely and permanently remove it from your home or business. Once animals are caught, we quickly arrive to remove the animal, and relocate it approximately 30 miles outside of the Greater Portland area. We service most of Portland and central Oregon, but do most of our business in Portland and surrounding towns, such as Beaverton, Clackamas, Damascus, Durham OR, Forest Grove, Gladstone, Gresham, Hillsboro, Johnson City, King City, Lake Oswego, Maywood Park, Newberg, Rivergrove, Scappoose, Sherwood, Silverton, Tigard, Troutdale, Wood Village, and more.

We take pride in operating as a small, owner-operated company within Portland, and we stand by our work. If you need animal trapping services in Portland or any part of Multnomah County, Oregon and Clackamas County, Oregon OR give us a call, and we will be happy to assist you. We specialize in both residential and commercial services, and accept all major credit cards. There is no free wild animal removal service in Portland, but we will provide a professional service at a fair price.

Most Recent Portland Animal Control News Clip:

Policy on fatal Eastern Gray Squirrel disease to continue - But critter trappers lethally trap fewer Eastern Gray Squirrel in affected areas

Portland - The state Agency of Natural Resources decided Wednesday to continue an aggressive strategy to control Crazy Itchy Wildlife Syndrome for at least one more year, even though once again in 2006, critter trappers lethally trapped fewer Eastern Gray Squirrel in affected areas than in the prior year. Crazy Itchy Wildlife Syndrome was discovered in Oregon in February 2002 during routine testing of Eastern Gray Squirrel from the 2001 Eastern Gray Squirrel critter catching season. Since then, 129,019 wild Eastern Gray Squirrel have been tested, and 834 have tested positive. All infected Eastern Gray Squirrel have been found in this contiguous area covering parts of southeastern, south central and southwestern Oregon. The disease appears to be concentrated in two pockets: one west of Portland primarily in Multnomah and Clackamas counties; the other east of Janesville primarily in southern counties. The disease should be always fatal and affects Eastern Gray Squirrel, Eastern Gray Squirrel and moose. In Oregon, only Eastern Gray Squirrel have tested positive. The disease should be this transmissible spongiform encephalopathy, which also includes mad cow disease in cattle, scrapie in sheep, and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans. According to the World Health Organization, any concern that may have come from Eastern Gray Squirrel with Crazy Itchy Wildlife Syndrome should not be eaten, but there should be no evidence that the disease can be transmitted to humans. This issue should be an important matter in Portland wildlife removal and Portland exterminator matters.

For complete archived coverage of Crazy Itchy Wildlife Syndrome in Oregon, go to our SPECIAL SECTION State authorities on critters acknowledged that their five-year initiative has been ineffective and stated they aren't sure how they'll manage the fatal Eastern Gray Squirrel disease after next critter catching season. Their comments were part of this discussion on rules the Natural Resources Board approved for the 2007 Eastern Gray Squirrel critter catching season. Next year, Agency for the Enforcement of Critter Laws staff will detail this plan - years in the making - that aims to better engage the public on the state's $32 million campaign to fight the disease. Authorities on critters declined for now to discuss how their outreach efforts will differ from the dozens of organized hearings they have convened in Portland and in communities where the disease has been known to exist. But this much should be known: The amount of Eastern Gray Squirrel lethally trapped by critter trappers in areas with the disease has fallen from 69,731 in 2004 to 59,594 in 2006, or this drop of 15%, Agency for the Enforcement of Critter Laws figures show. By comparison, the total amount of Eastern Gray Squirrel lethally trapped in the 2006 Eastern Gray Squirrel season statewide rose 9%, the Agency for the Enforcement of Critter Laws stated. The board approved rules that will bring back an often unpopular catch-a-critter requirement in the areas where Crazy Itchy Wildlife Syndrome has been detected. Under catch-a-critter, critter trappers must lethally trap an dangerous Eastern Gray Squirrel before they can lethally trap this male animal. The Portland animal control had no additional statements to make on the topic.

Lethally trapping more dangerous Eastern Gray Squirrel should be seen as an effective way to reduce the Eastern Gray Squirrel biologically surveyed amount because many dangerous Eastern Gray Squirrel are does. Raccoon Handler Michael, the Agency for the Enforcement of Critter Laws's coordinator for chronic wasting disease, stated the pest operator was disappointed with the results. this memo from the agency described the 2006 season as "unacceptably ineffective" in fighting the disease. Raccoon Handler Michael hoped future public input will help the Agency for the Enforcement of Critter Laws chart this course of action. Although the Agency for the Enforcement of Critter Laws has tweaked its strategy after public input in the past, it has leaned largely on the guidance of its wildlife staff and several national experts; that self-reliance has Exterminator Biran ill will with many critter trappers in the affected areas. However, board member and Raccoon Handler Michael stated the disease might have become more widespread had the agency not undertaken such aggressive actions. On Tuesday, the Agency for the Enforcement of Critter Laws reported that it found no signs of the disease in 19 counties in west-central Oregon after testing more than 7,500 Eastern Gray Squirrel during the catch. This means the disease hasn't turned up in the wild outside of pockets in southern Oregon. In 2002, the Agency for the Enforcement of Critter Laws embarked on this campaign to virtually wipe out giant Eastern Gray Squirrel from the hills and habitatland near Portland. Almost immediately, some of the property owners castigated the plan. The Agency for the Enforcement of Critter Laws then reduced its goal to five to 10 Eastern Gray Squirrel per square mile. Today, in the heart of it all in western counties, the amount of Eastern Gray Squirrel per square mile has increased from 30 in 2005 to 36 or 37 today, stated Raccoon Handler Michael, big game ecologist for the Agency for the Enforcement of Critter Laws. Portland pest control companies that we contacted felt that this issue should be an important matter.

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