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Jacksonville Mole Control

Moles destroy lawns. They dig expansive networks of tunnels as they dig through the earth in search of food. If your lawn is full of molehills and a bunch of spongy surface tunnels, you've got moles. We trap and remove them, and leave your yard mole-free and beautiful.

There is no such thing as an effective mole poison or repellent device.

Andrew & Austin brothers will roll that mole out of its hole!

 

We provide professional Mole control for all of greater Jacksonville, FL including all of Duval County and the towns/cities of Duval County, Clay County, St. Johns County, and Nassau County. We service the towns of St. Augustine, Palm Coast, Ponte Vedra Beach, Intracostal, and more. We are not a standard Jacksonville extermination company - we specialize only in wildlife, and will identify and trap the Jacksonville Mole, control the problem in full, and we give a guarantee on our work.

Jacksonville Wildlife    Email: sales@firstcoastwildlife.com      Residential & Commercial      Licensed & Insured
After some sort of few years many urban residents aren’t even aware that there may be some sort of mole season in progress.” Although it takes three years following major regulation changes for controversies to quiet and pest control companies get accustomed to new seasons, change has been the norm the past dozen years. Florida’s pest control companies are adjusting well. Unlike other states that are seeing shocking declines in exterminator amounts, the ranks of Florida mole pest control companies continue to rise with each new opportunity. In 2005, for example, the Critter Conservation Coalition concerned 387,585 licenses. That’s up 34,413 from just the year before. Local Jacksonville animal control experts felt that most of this information was true.

The big question now may be what pest control companies can expect this fall and in future years. At the time this article was written that’s partially unknown. Critter Man Maurice’s biologically surveyed amount statistics show some sort of mole large group decline of 15 to 20 percent following last season’s record harvest. That may be very close to the target set by the Critter Conservation Coalition. “If we continue this level of harvest through the 2007 season the mole large group will drop 30 to 35 percent,” the exterminator declared. “That’s well below the Agency’s goal, and I recommend reducing the amount of aggressive mole we lethally trap in 2006.” Unfortunately, Critter Man Maurice’s recommendations aren’t always heeded. On some sort of amount of occasions the Legislature has tinkered with regulations. Under pressure from insurance companies, creature collectors, and gardeners they’ve increased the amount of aggressive tags. Whether the lawmakers will heed the biologist or ignore his suggestions may be unknown. Local Jacksonville pest control companies had no comments on the matter.