Moles vs. Rodents

  • Family: Moles belong to Talpidae; rodents belong to a completely different group.
  • Physical differences:
    • Moles have five clawed toes; rodents have four.
    • Moles have a long, flexible snout, large digging claws, small eyes, and tiny or absent ears.
    • Moles have dense short fur, cylindrical bodies, and rely heavily on touch via whiskers.
  • Behavioral differences: Moles are subterranean insectivores with voracious appetites and high metabolism. Rodents have different diets and behaviors.

Physical Characteristics of Moles

  • Size: 6–8 inches long, 3–6 ounces.
  • Forefeet: Enlarged and shovel-like for digging.
  • Hind feet: Reduced.
  • Eyes: Poorly developed, mostly for detecting light.
  • Fur: Short, dense, can be brushed forward or backward.

Diet

  • Primarily earthworms.
  • Also eat grubs, millipedes, and ants.
  • Controlling grubs does not control moles.
  • Using insecticides to kill moles is ineffective and illegal.

Tunnels

  • Types:
    1. Shallow feeding tunnels – temporary, visible as surface mounds.
    2. Deep permanent tunnels – for resting, nesting, and latrines.
  • Digging speed: Can dig 10–20 feet of surface tunnels per hour; up to 100 feet per day.
  • Length: Longest recorded tunnel 3,300 feet.
  • Males create more extensive tunnels than females.
  • Tunnels are actively maintained and scent-marked to signal occupancy and mating readiness.

Mole Behavior

  • Active day and night; do not hibernate.
  • Timid and sensitive to noise.
  • Spend less time digging when food is abundant; more when food is scarce.

Mole Damage

  • Tunnel systems expand over years, so surface damage isn’t always an accurate measure of activity.
  • Surface tunnels are often temporary.

Ineffective Home Remedies

  • Lye, Drano, pickle juice, bleach, mothballs, ultrasonic devices, explosives, and similar approaches do not work.
  • These methods may damage property or worsen the problem.

Effective Mole Control

  • Requires understanding mole behavior.
  • Trapping is the only proven method.
  • Talpirid bait can support trapping but is not a substitute.
  • Mole control is a war of attrition, requiring persistence and skill.

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