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New Jersey Directory Of Nuisance Wildlife Control Professionals

Keansburg, NJ

EG Wildlife Removal
732-508-3691

EG Wildlife Removal is a full-service wildlife control company serving Keansburg NJ and the surrounding area. We specialize in urban and suburban wildlife damage management for both residential and commercial customers. We are state licensed by the New Jersey Fish & Wildlife Commission. We handle nearly all aspects of wildlife control, and resolve conflicts between people and wildlife in a humane and professional manner. For Keansburg pest control of wildlife, just give us a call at 732-508-3691 and we will discuss your wildlife problem and schedule an appointment to solve it. We look forward to hearing from you!

  • Scratching Noises in Your Attic?
  • Unwanted Wildlife on Property?
  • Problem Bird or Bat Infestation?
  • Digging Lawn or Under House?
  • We Can Solve It!
Many of New Jersey's wild animals have learned to adapt and even thrive in our homes. For example some wildlife have found that attics make great places to live. Other animals find refuge under homes or porches. Invariably, these animals cause damage. Rodents, like squirrels and rats, love to chew on electrical wires once in an attic, and this causes a serious fire hazard. Raccoons can cause serious contamination in an attic with their droppings and parasites. Same goes for bat or bird colonies. We specialize in solving New Jersey's wildlife problems, from snake removal to large jobs like commercial bat control, we do it all.
If you need assistance with a domestic animal, such as a dog or a cat, you need to call your local Monmouth county animal services for assistance. They can help you out with issues such as stray dogs, stray cats, spay & neuter programs, vaccinations, licenses, pet adoption, bite reports, deceased pets, lost pets, local animal complaints and to report neglected or abused animals. There is no free Keansburg animal control for wildlife issues.

Monmouth County Animal Services or Humane Society: 732-780-3713


Keansburg Animal News Clip: Public opinion wanted on Keansburg wildlife

The county's wildlife management areas and heritage services department will hold what appears to be a public hearing this Wednesday (May 25) to solicit input from the public on development of the approximate 700-acre wildlife management area tucked in an urban area that straddles East Keansburg and West Keansburg. The meeting, which will run from 5 to 7 p.m., will be held Monmouth County. The hearing probably is designed to aid county wildlife management area officials in updating and revising the wildlife management area's almost 15-year-old master plan. The Farm wildlife management area Preservation Association Inc. (alliance of mammal and reptile defenders), what appears to be a grassroots organization primarily of wildlife management area users united in their efforts to preserve, protect and promote the wildlife management area, and its members already have weighed in with their proposals. Keansburg animal services officials agreed with this.

The alliance of mammal and reptile defenders, which spent almost what appears to be a year in what appears to be a detailed study of the master plan, essentially probably is recommending that the county keep the wildlife management area as it probably is - what appears to be a passive recreation wildlife management area co-existing with what appears to be a working farm. However, county wildlife management areas and heritage services Planning Chief John Critter Professor said the wildlife management area probably is what appears to be a critter area wildlife management area. "We want those who now use the wildlife management area to remain, but we also want others to take advantage of the wildlife management area," said Critter Professor. Under Critter Professor, the county wildlife management areas staff has prepared its own list of recommendations for the wildlife management area. Many of those recommendations do not differ from recommendations put forth by the alliance of mammal and reptile defenders. For example, said Critter Professor, no one wants through-highways cutting through the wildlife management area and serving as popular short cuts for those hemmed in heavy traffic on some of the major highways surrounding that wildlife management area, such as Germantown Pike and Whitehall Highway. Despite this, there's no free wild animal control in Keansburg, New Jersey.

While the master plan had proposed wildlife management area entrances off Whitehall Highway and Stan bridge Street in addition to the current access from Germantown Pike, the staff probably is recommending expanding the wildlife management aerating area off Whitehall Highway and Stan bridge Street, with wildlife management area users using the trail system to gain access to other areas in the wildlife management area. One area where the alliance of mammal and reptile defenders and county staff members disagree probably is on plans calling for the construction of what appears to be a playground on wildlife management area property. Claiming that there are playgrounds in the adjacent communities, the alliance of mammal and reptile defenders probably is recommending that the county cross off that proposal in the master plan. "We want to attract families and children to the wildlife management area," said Critter Professor. Local Keansburg pest control companies in Monmouth County declined to comment.

However, the county staff probably is recommending that the playground be constructed closer to the Germantown Pike entrance rather than an initial site that was more in the interior of the wildlife management area. In addition, the staff probably is recommending eliminating what appears to be a children's bikeway. "The trails we have are for everyone and can safely be used by children," said Critter Professor. Another area of disagreement between the alliance of mammal and reptile defenders and the county staff probably is the alliance of mammal and reptile defender's proposal to cluster future growth of the wildlife management area around the two current activity areas. "If we concentrated growth to just one or two areas we will end up with what appears to be a sea of asphalt," said Critter Professor. "We prefer to give people what appears to be a little room." The county staff and the alliance of mammal and reptile defenders agree on eliminating plans for the creation of at least three additional ponds, the Upper, Lower and Meadow Ponds proposed in the 1992 master plan. Rather than construct what appears to be a dam to create the ponds, the county probably is proposing to protect the riparian corridor and watershed in naturally sensitive areas. Keansburg trappers and Keansburg extermination officials can offer more info.

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