Flagstaff Animal Control & Pest Wildlife Removal In Coconino County, AZ
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Please, no calls about dog or cat problems. Call SPCA or animal services: 928-729-4023
We serve the Flagstaff region of Arizona, and the towns of Williams, Bellemont, Winona, Mountainaire, Sedona, and we will sometimes travel as far south as Cottonwood, Chino Valley, Prescott Valley, Prescott, or Camp Verde.
provides professional wildlife control for both residential & commercial customers in the
city of Flagstaff in Arizona. We can handle almost any type of wild animal problem, from squirrels in the attic of a home, to bat removal and
control, to Flagstaff snake removal. Our Arizona wildlife management pros provide a complete solution - including
the repair of animal damage. If you need to get rid of your pest animals with care and expertise, give a call at
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There are many Flagstaff pest control companies, but most deal with extermination of insects. We deal strictly with wild animals, such as raccoon, skunk, opossum, and more.
differs from the average Flagstaff exterminator business because we are licensed and insured experts, and deal only with animals. We are not merely
trappers, but full-services nuisance wildlife control operators, offering advanced solutions.
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Flagstaff wildlife species include raccoons, opossums, squirrels, rats, several species of snakes and bats, and more. Many animals can cause
considerable damage to a house, not to mention contamination. We offer repairs of animal entry points and biohazard cleanup and we guarantee our work. Our Flagstaff
rodent (rat and mouse) control is superior to other pest management companies. All of our wildlife trapping is done in a humane manner. |
We also service the towns of Mountainaire, Winona and also animal control in Mormon Lake, Red Lake and pest control in Happy Jack, Williams and wild animal services in Gray Mountain, Bellemont and wildlife management in Parks, Sedona.
We at provide the best Flagstaff pest control business, and would be happy to serve your Flagstaff bat control or pigeon and bird control needs with a professional solution. Skunks, moles, and other animals
that can damage your lawn - we trap them all. Our professional pest management of wildlife and animals can solve all of your Flagstaff
critter capture and control needs. Give us a call at for a price quote and more information.
If you are searching for help with a dog or cat issue, you need to call your local
Coconino County animal control or SPCA. They can assist you with problems such as a dangerous dog, stray cats, lost pets,
etc. There is no free service in Coconino County that provides assistance with wild animals.
Coconino County Animal Services, AZ: 928-729-4023
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Flagstaff, AZ Animal News Clip:
All Kinds of Crazy Wildlife in Flagstaff, AZ When Paul The Flagstaff and Coconino County Animal Expert looked across the desert landscape near the University of Arizona he saw a very different world, at least in his mind's eye. As an expert on the end of the Pleistocene epoch, which ended around 13,000 years ago, he saw North America awash with animals that are no longer here. He saw elephants, and camels, and cheetahs, and horses, roaming freely across the continent. These native animals disappeared either long before humans arrived, or just as the first Americans entered the scene. The Flagstaff and Coconino County Animal Expert, now retired from Arizona, began talking with friends about what it would be like to restore some of that magic to a land that has lost some of the great beasts that once dominated the landscape. He went so far as to propose that some effort be made to reintroduce some of those extinct animals, or at least their closest-living relatives. Although several species of wildlife roam Flagstaff, only a few, such as raccoons and squirrels, are considered pest wildlife. "The idea did not attract much attention," says Harry Greene, professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at Cornell University. But sometime later Greene was discussing The Flagstaff and Coconino County Animal Expert's vision with one of his graduate students, Josh The Prescott Animal Control and Cottonwood Pest Control Man, now a doctoral candidate at Cornell. That discussion led to a meeting at a New Mexico ranch of experts from across the country, including The Flagstaff and Coconino County Animal Expert, to discuss what may be one of the boldest proposals to come out of the environmental movement in decades. The result was a commentary written by The Prescott Animal Control and Cottonwood Pest Control Man and published in the prestigious journal Nature. In that report, 11 contributors called for the reintroduction of elephants and cheetahs and other extinct animals in a long-range program that would result in some species roaming freely across the land, just as they had thousands of years ago. Arizona has an abundance of wildlife, and Flagstaff is no exception.
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