If you need assistance with a domestic animal, such as a dog or a cat, you need to call your local
Mobile 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.
To report a dead animal on the road, an injured bird, a lost baby squirrel, a dangerous bear, or anything like that, call any of these free government animal services:
Mobile County does not provide free wildlife control services. If you want to pay for critter removal
services, call Mobile Wildlife Pest Control at 251-345-6879. They provide professional wildlife control for both residential & commercial customers in the
city of Mobile. They offer custom Mobile wild animal control
solutions for almost any type of wildlife problem, whether
it be the noises of squirrels running through the attic, a colony of bats living in a building, or
the destructive behavior of a raccoon, they have the experience and the tools to quickly and professionally
solve your animal problem in Mobile County in Alabama. Check their prices, and for a consultation, give them a call at 251-345-6879
It is important to remember that most county animal services in Mobile County and elsewhere no longer provide assistance in cases involving wild animals and wildlife
management. If you have a wildlife problem or need to get rid of wildlife, need an exterminator or exterminating company, pest control or critter trapping or traps or
wild animal prevention in Mobile County, you should call a privately owned wildlife removal company at this number: 251-345-6879
Mobile is designated an All-America City designation by the National Civic League and surveys rank the city as one of the top five most polite cities in the USA. Mobile consistently ranks well within Money Magazine's "Best Places to Live" rankings. One interesting wildlife event occurrs on the eastern shore of Mobile Bay: the Jubilee.This is an event in which bottom-dwelling life, such as crustaceans, rise to the top of the water on hot summer nights, and may be due to low dissolved oxygen levels in the water. Animals forced to the surface include crabs, shrimp, fish such as flounder and other marine life. When a jubilee occurs, many people form fishing parties to harvest the bounty. Of course, this wildlife event is a welcome intrusion, unlike a snake in the garage. We also service the towns of Saraland, Satsuma, Grand Bay, Axis, Mount Vernon, Theodore and also animal control in Dauphin Island, Eight Mile, Citronelle and pest control in Chunchula, and wild animal services in Bayou La Batre, Coden, Chickasaw, Creola and wildlife management in Wilmer, Bucks, Prichard, Semmes, Irvington, Saint Elmo. All of these places are ripe for wildlife intrusion!
To learn more about us, visit our website at mobileanimalcontrol.org.
"We've got to have (an animal control officer) because people generally expect that someone will respond to animal complaints, and they'll call the town since the county is not within that job," Whisnant said. " But some say it is within Mobile County animal control services' job. It's something we need to be doing whether it's animals that are digging up their flower beds, or barking at them and frightening them, or it may be a bad animal. Animal problems come in a wide variety."
A new animal control ordinance for Mobile will be one topic at two neighborhood council meetings this week. Chuck Dickerson, executive director of the Humane Society of Mobile County, speaks to Neighborhood Council No. 5 at 7 p.m. tonight at Mountain View School cafeteria, and Neighborhood Council No. 4 in the Highwood Mobile Home Park clubhouse at 6:30 p.m. Thursday. The animal control ordinances proposes requiring registration of cats, but leaves the number of dogs most people can own at two. Coming up next week is a Council of Councils meeting at 7 p.m. Oct. 26 in the Gibson Room at the Civic Center, as council members meet with city commissioners, and hear about a program that promotes being a good neighbor. Police Officer Tranny Tiggman will discuss ways people can be good neighbors to each other in regard to Mobile County animals and their control.
Remember, for a dog/cat problem, call 251-574-3647, and if you need wildlife removal service in Mobile County, call Mobile Wildlife Pest Control: 251-345-6879.