Animal Care Services
Wildlife
As our urban areas grow, animals lose their homes. Looking for a place to raise their families, industrious raccoons, squirrels, and other small creatures gnaw and claw their way into roofs, attics, vent pipes, and under homes.
These wild urban residents are resourceful. They have managed to adapt to a changing world and find the next best thing to natural habitat: manmade structures that provide all the insulation and protection they need to raise growing families. In many cases, urban areas are much easier places to live for these creatures. There is plenty of sustenance available in our trash and in our pets’ food bowls.
Here are some tips to mitigate or eliminate the threat of wild animals on your property.
Eliminate the attraction
Don’t leave pet food outside, as it attracts wildlife. Never put out your trash the night before trash pickup day. Seal the holes and small entryways into your home. Some animals can squeeze through a hole the size of a quarter.
Increase the unattractiveness
Wild animals like to den under foundations, sheds, and decks. Tennis balls soaked in ammonia should irritate their sense of smell, making the area undesirable to them. Moth balls scattered under decks and shrubbery also help deter cats and opossums.
Coyote Information
Animal Care Services receives many calls regarding public safety. While we know that there is great concern about wildlife attacking people, the risk is very low. Most of the wildlife with which we share our cities is very adaptable – as is the coyote. They are one of the most adaptable species on the planet. Because they eat a variety of foods which are abundant in cities and are opportunistic, they find more than enough food in urban neighborhoods. Often, coyotes living in the Coastal Bend area are actually building dens in the sand dunes; coming out throughout the day to seek food.
Coyotes are omnivores, meaning they eat plants and animals, like so many of our urban wildlife (skunks, opossums, raccoons); and they are opportunistic, meaning they prefer to find the easiest meal. All urban wildlife species eat a variety of urban food – from mice, dog food and cat food left outside, rotting fruit under trees, overflowing bird seed on the ground, even food that is thrown out of car windows into the ditch. However, coyotes tend to make people nervous – because of their larger size. Coyotes in the Texas are actually smaller than many people think – averaging only around 30 pounds, only about 1 ½ feet tall at the shoulder.
The easiest way to assist with keeping coyotes wild and away from your home is to remove the food source. To learn more about how to deter coyotes, please visit the Texas Parks and Wildlife web page, linked below.
About Us
The mission of Animal Care Services is to advocate for the humane care of animals, promote responsible pet ownership, and protect the health, safety, and welfare of its residents and their pets.
Learn more about us here.
Contact Information
Address: 2626 Holly Road
Corpus Christi, TX 78415
Phone: (361) 826-4630
Customer Call Center: 311
For Emergencies, Call CCPD:
(361) 886-2600
Hours
Hours of Operation:
Monday thru Saturday,
8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Adoptions & Microchips:
Monday thru Saturday,
1 p.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Walk-in visits are welcomed!