Compare full coverage across 2 outlets
General14:21 · 22h ago

How to Identify and Safely Remove Mouse Droppings in Your Home

N12Center
Translated & summarized from N12 by baba
The story · English

Small droppings found in kitchens, cupboards, or near baseboards can indicate a mouse infestation in your home. Mouse droppings are typically 3 to 6 millimeters long, dark brown to black, elongated with pointed ends, resembling small grains of rice. Fresh droppings are shiny and soft, while older ones dry out, turn gray, and crumble easily.

Mice prefer quiet, hidden areas such as inside cupboards, pantries, behind refrigerators and stoves, under sinks, attics, storage rooms, crawl spaces, and along baseboards. They may also nest inside walls, air ducts, or around pipes. Additional signs of mice include gnawed food packaging, furniture or cables, torn insulation or nesting materials, a distinctive urine odor, and nighttime sounds of scratching or running within walls or ceilings.

Mouse droppings can be confused with those of rats, cockroaches, or other small pests, but mouse droppings tend to be uniform in size with pointed ends. To confirm an infestation, look for multiple signs rather than relying solely on droppings.

Cleaning mouse droppings requires caution to avoid spreading harmful bacteria or viruses. It is advised to wear gloves and a mask, spray the area with disinfectant, wait a few minutes, then collect the droppings with paper towels and dispose of them in a sealed bag. Afterward, disinfect the area again and wash hands thoroughly. Mouse droppings can carry diseases such as salmonella and leptospirosis.

After cleaning, inspect your home for entry points and seal cracks or gaps around doors, windows, and pipes. If new droppings appear or signs of mice persist, consider using traps or hiring a professional pest control service to address the problem promptly.

Read the original at N12
Full coverage · 2 outlets
100% centerFirst: N12 · 22h ago

The same event, reported separately by each outlet. Open a few to compare what different newsrooms emphasize — and what they leave out.

Center 2
Related stories · 5

Not the same event — other stories that share this one’s people, places, or theme: background, reactions, and follow-ups.

Open the live terminal