MAIN: (918) 739-4382
The Oklahoma Wildlife Control® Limited Liability Company has provided a generalized listing of wildlife
species that we encounter, manage and control. Please click on the specie link to find out more
information about it. Thank you.
Reggie, Thank You. It is a real
pleasure dealing with an honest
company again.
Your professionalism and
communications skills with
regards to our wildlife
problem are to be
commended. Thank you for
your services and dedication.
Reginald, I can't thank you
enough for getting the
mother raccoon and her
babies out of my attic. I love
you.
OK Wildlife Control® , LLC * 19721 East 3rd Street * Tulsa, OK * USA * 74108 Phone: (918) 739-4382
All rights reserved.

Wildlife Species Controlled
OK Wildlife Control®, LLC
Phone Number: (918) 739-4382
19721 East 3rd Street
Tulsa, OK 74108
Email:
info@oktrapsupply.com
Other Websites:
http://oklahomawildlifecontrol.com
http://okwildlifecontrol.com
OK Wildlife Control®, L.L.C. contractors and
employees utilize and practice BMPs (Best
Management Practices) whenever possible and
practical. These practices assist in maximizing
removal procedures while minimizing the stresses
caused to wildlife.

Best Management Practices (BMPs) for Trapping
in the United States was written by the U.S. Trap
Testing Technical Work Group of the International
Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies.
Development of this document would not have
been possible without the cooperation and
participation of many state wildlife agencies,
expert trappers, and trapper organizations. For a
complete BMPs listing,
click here.
BMPs
Hours of Operation
Mon - Fri
6:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Sat - Sun
"Other than" business hour calls are
treated as emergencies, and billed
accordingly.
8:00 AM - NOON
Oklahoma Wildlife Control®, L.L.C.
Resolving Human & Animal Conflicts.
Click on species to find out more information ..
The Oklahoma Wildlife Control® , LLC., is a nuisance & predatory wildlife solutions and service
company, with a number of specialties. However, OWC is not an animal rescue organization. If you
have problems with domestic cats and dogs, we suggest that you contact your local animal shelter
for assistance. Thank you.
Be sure to look at our
photo gallery.
Be sure to view our
video gallery.
Visit our frequently
asked questions page.
Your answer might be
here.
Stay updated with our
news and specials.
OWC HUMANE EUTHANASIA STATEMENT

Policy Statement: Definition of Humane

"In the opinion of OWC, "humane" should be regarded as a relative rather than absolute term. "Humane"
is a term that defines the attitude or feelings of the operator (human) conducting the act toward a
subject (in this case animal) rather than the act itself. Webster's II New Riverside University Dictionary
describes it as "adj. Characterized by kindness, mercy, or compassion". Therefore the true test of
humaneness lies in the intentions of the operator performing the act. If an operator controls, captures,
kills, or takes action with kindness, mercy or compassion as a factor when deciding or making choices
than they are acting in a humane manner. Certainly to cause a "humane" death should be one that is as
swift and painless as possible, by choosing a method found to be superior to another when compared
side by side. Factors, in particular the legal or physical availability of a method, play a part in
humaneness.

Options available to a veterinarian in a clinic may not be available to the wildlife control professional in
the field. A CO2 chamber may kill certain species with less physical trauma than a body grip trap, but if
the utilization of the chamber involves increased handling and transport injury or stress, the body grip
may be more humane. If an animal is in immediate unrelievable pain and no sanctioned humane method
of euthanasia is available (i.e. AVMA defined), a swift but non-sanctioned method, such as blunt force
trauma head strike, would be more humane than abandoning the animal to its suffering.

In the opinion of OWC, when it is necessary to use lethal methods or that the animal will be killed after
capture, the method employed should be the safest to the operator and the public, and the quickest and
most painless available (see OWC Policy Statement on Euthanasia).

OWC supports the training of NWCOs in a variety of methods of euthanasia, including but not limited to
those that are recommended by the AVMA, and encourages the conditional ranking of killing methods
by species from most to least humane, so NWCOs can choose the method most appropriate to the
species and situation.”

End of Statement
OWC POLICY STATEMENT ON EUTHANASIA

“It is the policy and practice of OWC to promote the most effective, scientifically based principles in regards to Wildlife Damage Management. Therefore it
is our opinion that where laws or rules are to be formed in regards to wildlife control operators killing wildlife that the law or rule should state:

"That when it is necessary to use lethal methods or that the animal will be killed after capture than the method employed should be the safest to the
operator and public, quickest and most painless available".

These principals should apply to selection of lethal capture devices as well as killing methods. Therefore if it is known that an animal is to be killed after
capture it is considered a better choice to use a quick killing lethal method of capture rather than to first put an animal thru the possible stress of capture
and handling prior to death. In situations where it is not practical to use lethal methods for safety consideration, then it is recommended the animal be
removed and handled in a manner that causes the least amount of stress and killed as quickly as circumstances permit.

OWC supports the training of NWCOs in a variety of methods of euthanasia, including but not limited to those that are recommended by the AVMA, and
encourages the conditional ranking of killing methods by species from most to least humane, so NWCOs can choose the method most appropriate to the
species and situation”.

End of Statement