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Moles are voracious, high-metabolism feeders who use their large front paws to tunnel through the ground searching for ants, earthworms, and grubs; some species consume more than their weight in food daily. "They are pretty well adapted to life underground," says Craig Riekena, a compliance manager for Bell Laboratories, which makes the mole poison Talpirid. "Their fur lies and flexes against their skin in a way that lets them tunnel as if they're swimming."
You'll know you have a mole problem if you spot visible trenches and dug-up soil in your lawn and garden. Look for the raised ridges that characterize mole feeding burrows, along with molehills, which look like miniature volcanoes with plugged holes in the center. These are often located close to the deep permanent burrows where moles nest and reproduce.
Some molehills can be substantial enough to damage mower blades and housings. Flower beds are also at risk. "Since grubs gather around the roots of shrubs and flowers, moles scrape that dirt away and remove the plant's foundation and depriving the flowers of nourishment," says Stephanie VanSyckle, a spokeswoman for mole-trap manufacturer Victor.
Whether you take action against moles will depend on the extent of the damage they cause and your personal threshold for how it looks. Consumers Union Senior Scientist Michael Hansen notes that the ridges and molehills are mainly an aesthetic problem; you can tamp down the ridges and water them to repair damage. Hansen points out that moles' preferred foods include several soil pests, especially grubs, so getting rid of moles could exacerbate other problems.
To prevent moles from burrowing under or climbing into specific sections of your garden, experts recommend burying metal mesh hardware cloth 2 feet vertically below ground with another 6 inches showing above ground. Moles tend to tunnel closer to the surface in spring when soil is moist and go deeper in the summer. "Since moles have trouble burrowing through dense soil, arranging stones or dense claylike soil around a garden to a depth of 2 feet can also help," says Hansen.
Another natural defense?using a castor-oil mixture?has been touted by a poster in the Pest Patrol forum who says he hit on the idea after hearing that moles sometimes avoid fields where castor beans are planted. There's more than a bean of truth to that idea?a series of studies by three Michigan State University researchers revealed that one castor-oil-based spray repellent did keep moles at bay for periods ranging from 30 to 60 days.
Peter Sawchuk, a program leader in our Technical Department, reports good results using Spectracide's Mole Stop and Bonide's Mole & Gopher Repellent. "Both of these have worked well for me," Sawchuk says, "but keep in mind that you'll be driving the moles into the adjoining property, which might not endear you to your neighbor." Other posters are recommending cats as another natural way to control moles.
More lethal alternatives include trapping and killing moles, which,experts say, is the only way to be sure you're rid of them, and usingpoison. Consumer Reports has not tested the traps or poisonscited below, and there are safety, health, and/or environmental issueswith all of these methods.

Also check local regulations before you begin trapping. If moletrapping is banned in your state, as it is in Massachusetts andWashington, another alternative is a poison bait such as Talpirid. It comes in a form that resembles an earthworm?another preferred food source of moles?and contains the rodenticide bromethalin, a potent neurotoxin that was developed after rodents began building up resistance to earlier poisons.
The Environmental Protection Agency,concerned about the number of accidental poisonings of children andpets, recently restricted sales of many rodenticides to licensed pestapplicators and stipulated that they could be deployed only in sealedbait stations. But since moles are technically insectivores, notrodents, products marketed to control moles are not consideredrodenticides and are exempted from those restrictions.
In the wake of an accidental poisoning in New York City,the state of New York has restricted bromethalin's sale and use tolicensed pesticide applicators. "Talpirid is a registered pesticide inNew York, so it is not banned, but because of the concentration of thespecific active ingredient listed?bromethalin?its use is restricted,"says Maureen Wren, spokeswoman for the New York State Department ofEnvironmental Conservation.
"Bromethalin is World Health Organizaton Class Ia pesticide?it'shighly acutely toxic," says Hansen. "If it's eaten by children, or ifthe dead moles are dug up and eaten by pets, it can be harmful. It isalso toxic to birds and fish." To ensure that you safely and effectively usebromethalin, follow all product instructions and precautions.

If all else fails, you can hope that raptors will take up residencenear your lawn. "A group of hawks did a pretty good job keeping thelawns at our mower-testing facility in Fort Myers, Florida, free of moles," says Sawchuk, who took the photo of the hawk atright.?Gian Trotta and Michael MacCaskey
Essential information: Our Complete Lawn & Yard Guideoffers how-to instructions and ratings of a wide array of lawn andgarden equipment. You'll also find the expert advice for dealing with weeds, common insects, and lawn diseases?and an interactive guide to the major lawn problems.
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