Welcome to Pest Animal Removal Bradenton! We are a wildlife removal company servicing Bradenton, FL. Why should you call us for your wildlife removal problems? Because we take a humane approach to pest and wildlife control that we pride ourselves on. We perform preventative and exclusions methods to remove the critters first, relying on live cage traps as a last resort, sealing the entry-points as we go. This ensures the problem doesn’t come back. We don’t use poisons. Why? Because they don’t work, and they also cause more problems than they solve. We want to keep you and your household safe and happy, and that’s just why we will do the job in the safest way possible. We will not only repair any damage the wildlife has done to your home, but perform all sealing jobs. We will also remove any leftovers from your animal invader, cleaning up disease threats in the form of bat guano, for example, and also disposing of dead carcasses. We specialize in removing animals in the attic - squirrels, rats, raccoons, etc., but there isn’t a job too big or small for us. We are available 24/7 - we know that animals don’t take days off, so we don’t either. Call us now at 941-256-3218 for your Bradenton wildlife control needs.
About Pest Animal Removal Bradenton and Our Services:
Armadillo (Dasypus Novemcinctus) looks like a big house cat. It is nine-banded. Its body is
brownish gray and is about a foot and a half in length. Its tail is also over a foot long and
is covered with bony rings. A Bradenton armadillo has scaly plates and these are known as scutes. They
cover its tail, head and the whole body. The plates on the rumps and the shoulders are quite
large. They are nine and in rare cases, there armadillos with lesser number of bands or plates
on their midsections that allow it to bend. It looks like armor with a series of plates or
scutes that are covered with skin that looks like leather. This armor serves as a protective
shield against Florida predators and also against biting insects as well as abrasive soil.
A Florida armadillo has a long snout and a pointed head. Its teeth are large and look like pegs. It has
pointed ears. The front teeth have sharp and large claws that help it to burrow after digging. Its
underbelly is soft. It has a fur cover also on its body despite the armor-like bands. Hence, an
armadillo is sensitive to extreme temperatures. During winter, it will be active during the warmer
part of the day and during summer; it will be active during the night when it is cool. It is not
able to withstand when the temperatures drop very low below freezing. They are hetero-thermal and
their regulatory systems are not so developed to adapt to drastic fluctuations in temperatures.
However, they maintain a constant temperature in their bodies under conditions without stress.
Male Bradenton armadillos have no scrotum and their testes do not stretch past their pelvic girdle. The
females also do not have a true vagina but rather have a single uro-genital exit.
Armadillos are mostly found in hardwood forests and brush lands. They prefer regions that have soft
soil as they can easily burrow through it. They are also found near water sources such as water holes
and creeks. They are, however, found in a large range of habitats such as deserts, mountains, coastal
regions and wetlands. They like to remain mostly on the ground as their body structure does not make it
easy for them to climb trees. They love to swim in a smaller body of water.