Mice in their millions are eating grain crops, destroying food, and invading houses. Here's how it all started.
Farmers in several parts of Australia are being overrun by hoards of mice, with an explosion in population numbers threatening $1 billion worth of crop exports.
The CSIRO has warned that mouse populations have exploded, but the cause of the outbreak remains a partial mystery.
Got a mouse in your house? That thought alone may terrify you. Now imagine if mice were scampering through your house, rummaging in your pantry or even running across your face at night. That sounds ...
A mouse plague is invading farms and homes in southern and Western Australia. But what does that really look like?
Residents of Australia's grain-producing communities are finding the rodents in their beds as a mouse plague overtakes the ...
As if the cost of diesel and the lack of fertiliser were not enough, South Australia's farmers are also facing the prospect ...
Footage taken inside a shed at Morawa highlights the problem of mice moving inside as the weather cools. (Ben Norris) A ...
BOGAN GATE, Australia (AP) — At night, the floors of sheds vanish beneath carpets of scampering mice. Ceilings come alive with the sounds of scratching. One family blamed mice chewing electrical wires ...
Multiple parts of Australia have been hit with large numbers of mice, with farmers being forced to either shoot the animals or burn damaged crops, according to multiple reports. According to 9 News, a ...
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