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RI, MA EHS Pest Control Blog

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Purple Squirrel A Mystery

16 Apr 2012

Posted by Joseph Coupal

Pennsylvania’s Purple Squirrel A Rainbow-Colored Riddle

A bright purple squirrel trapped by a Pennsylvania couple has experts offering all sorts of theories -- but no concrete answers.

Percy and Connie Emert from Jersey Shore, Pa., trapped the brightly colored creature while trying to keep the birds safe in their backyard feeder, reported Accuweather.com. They told the weather service they had no explanation for the rodent’s deep purple color.

"We have no idea whatsoever. It's really purple. People think we dyed it, but honestly, we just found it and it was purple," the Emerts told Accuweather.

Experts queried by Accuweather had several theories for the unusual look, but no hard answers. Indeed, Krish Pillai, a professor at Lock Haven University of Pennsylvania, told Accuweather he thought the coloring was dangerous for the animal.

I’ve got to think one of the suggestions might be it fell in a Porta John that had blue coloration. - Henry Kacprzyk, Pittsburgh Zoo curator

"This is not good at all. That color looks very much like Tyrian purple. It is a natural organobromide compound seen in molluscs and rarely found in land animals. The squirrel (possibly) has too much bromide in its system," he said.

Some AccuWeather.com meteorologists had their own theories. Expert Senior Meteorologist Henry Margusity thought it was merely an accident.

"The squirrel could have been looking for somewhere warm and fallen into a port-a-potty or something similar," he said,

Henry Kacprzyk, a curator at the Pittsburgh Zoo, said Thursday he thought it looked like a gray squirrel tinged in purple, after looking at a picture of the critter on an iPhone.

He knows of albino squirrels. Black squirrels. Gray squirrels. Reddish squirrels.

“But the purple coloration, from the purple I saw … it looked to me like this animal had come in contact with something with its fur and dyed its fur,” Kacprzyk said. The squirrel could have come in contact with a pokeberry patch, but pokeberries aren’t in season.

And strange as it sounds, he thought Margusity’s toilet theory might hold water.

“I’ve got to think one of the suggestions might be it fell in a Porta John that had blue coloration,” he said with a chuckle. “I have no idea why … but I don’t think it was born that way.”

When asked about the suggestions by some people in online forums of the potential impact of fracking fluid, Kacprzyk said the composition of such fluids in Pennsylvania wasn’t known. “My guess there is if you don’t know something, is that there’s no scientific proof to that. … I would find it amazing that it had that kind of effect,” he said.

In general, purple is an unusual color for mammals, let alone squirrels.

“There are definitely birds that have coloration like this … but not mammals,” he said. “Mammals don’t normally uptake color, ingest something it goes through and (then) it comes out through their fur.”

George Williams,
General Manager - Staff Entomologist

Pest Control, RI, Pest Control, MA 

Squirrels Damage Fiber Optic Networks

21 Oct 2011

Posted by Joseph Coupal

Squirrels Do 17% of the Damage to Fiber Optic Network

Fred Lawler, senior vice president of global field services at Level 3, said that "squirrel chews" account for a whopping 17 percent of the company's damage repairs this year, across 57,000 miles of intercity and 27,000 miles of metropolitan fiber.

Lawler noted, "Of all the animals in the whole world, almost all of our animal damage comes from this furry little nut eater. Squirrel chews account for a whopping 17% of our damages so far this year! But let me add that it is down from 28% just last year and it continues to decrease since we added cable guards to our plant. Honestly, I don’t understand what the big attraction is or why they feel compelled to gnaw through cables. Our guys in the field have given this some thought and jokingly suspect the cable manufacturers of using peanut oil in the sheathing. If you have any new ideas on how we can combat these wayward rodents, I’d love to hear from you. We are always looking for ways to improve."

George Williams
General Manager - Staff Entomologist

Pest Control, RI, Pest Control, MA

Squirrels on Crack

14 Sep 2010

Posted by Joseph Coupal

Squirrels on CrackLocation = Weymouth, MA

You really can’t make this stuff up!!! Granted it is a London story but it had to do with squirrels which we deal with all year long plus it was too funny not to put on our blog.

The headline is “Crack-crazed squirrels terrorize South London” and it is a very true statement. In a desperate search for a fix, eschewing their traditional nuts and digging up residents' front gardens in what appears to be a credible zoological threat squirrels are hooked on crack. HOW???

Crack dealers and addicts have apparently taken to burying their stashes in people's gardens in the streets around the suburban towns after police crackdowns forced them from the concrete of cities.  Neighborhood residents are reporting “ill-looking squirrels with bloodshot eyes desperately digging. It was almost as if it was trying to find hidden crack rocks." Other residents have seen squirrels become unusually aggressive. Crack squirrels are a recognized problem in America. They are common in parks used by addicts in New York and Washington DC. They have been known to attack park visitors in their search for a fix.

Be careful you do not get mugged or car jacked by a crack addicted squirrel!!!

Maureen Radeos
Service Coordinator - EHS Pest Control

RI Pest Control - Squirrel Rental?

01 Dec 2009

Posted by Joseph Coupal

North Providence, RI Pest Control

From time to time we get calls that range from frantic-horrified to unusual. In this age of technology we have to add emails to this list. I would have to qualify the email below as unusual and if you let your imagination work you may even say it can be classified as a weird. This is an actual email from a consumer:

“I am VERY interested in renting/buying a squirrel. I only need it for tomorrow and then I will either return it or release it into the wild. Is this possible? This is VERY important and I am willing to pay for it. Thanks!”

I will let you all think what you want. We did however tell this person that we control nuisance wildlife, we do not rent them. We never did hear why he needed the squirrel. I am not really sure I want to know anyway!

Melissa Charnitsky
Customer Care Specialist

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