Decon dehydrates mice. They'll load up on the little pellets and take them back "home" for snacks. They keep munching the pellets off and on then die someplace else from dehydration and usually desiccate before they rot, no smell. There's a warning on the box to prevent children and pets from ingesting the pellets.
I know it's "bait" but does it ATTRACT mice, or just work if they happen across it.
Say I have some DCON near my garage door. If there are mice outside, will they smell it (or whatever) and come in after it?
Decon dehydrates mice. They'll load up on the little pellets and take them back "home" for snacks. They keep munching the pellets off and on then die someplace else from dehydration and usually desiccate before they rot, no smell. There's a warning on the box to prevent children and pets from ingesting the pellets.
NO! .
Here's what E-How says about how Decon kills: "Baits differ from traps in eliminating rodents through the ingestion of chemicals that are harmful to the rodents. The active ingredient of d-Con baits is brodifacoum, an anticoagulant commonly used in pesticides, which inhibits the rodents' abilities to digest food and water, making the rodents become starved and dehydrated after eating enough bait." Wafarin is not so powerful as brodifacoum. They may bleed internally, too, but that effect is not mentioned. Either way, an unpleasant death.
So, Yes.
You may not have noticed but none of your links say much about internal bleeding being the cause of death in mice from decon, the topic I addressed. I posted nothing about brodifacoum not being a warfarin type poison, just that it was more powerful than warfarin which fact is confirmed in one of your links.Why would you disagree with a Dr VM?
It is exactly what he says it is.
Nasty way to die. Thanks for the clarification.I guess I have to rant here a little bit... about the internet as a source of information. It can be very good and it can be very bad... As mentioned earlier warfarin type poisons are anticoagulants. After being eaten, your liver is blocked from making factors necessary for blood coagulation, factors II, VII, IX, and X and the anticoagulant proteins C and S. Blood loss results in "hypovolemia", lack of blood volume, which to some people would equal dehydration. Not exactly the same but to a "nonmedical" person, the difference may be negligible. But with the warfarin compounds, what you die from is the blood leaking out of your capillaries into lungs, abdomen, thoracic cavity and brain/spinal cord.
Hope this helps..