Lewiston, Maine • (866) 446-8019, (207)782-3239
Maine Animal Damage Control

Service Area:
Lewiston, Auburn, Augusta, Portland, Brunswick, Poland, Sabattus, Manchester, Yarmouth, Freeport
 and surrounding communities. Statewide service is available.

 Hours of Operation: Monday–Sunday 8:30am-7:00pm
By Appointment


After Hours
Emergency Service Available

The Humane Wildlife Control Agent
Nuisance Wildlife Removal

 

Choose Maine Animal Damage Control for humane wildlife removal and wildlife exclusion services. Our fully licensed and insured wildlife control agent is a graduate of the New England Animal Control and Humane Academy, is certified in Disaster Animal Response by the Humane Society of the United States and is certified as a Police Officer in the State of Maine.  He can take care of your problem efficiently and reasonably. Contact our animal control agent in Lewiston, Maine, for nuisance wildlife control and relocation. We guarantee the lowest price in the industry!!


We do not euthanize or kill healthy animals. All wildlife is released unharmed in an appropriate location. All domestic animals are returned to their owners or turned over to the Greater Androscoggin Humane Society, as per Maine State Law. Unfortunately, if your domestic pet lacks identification, it stands a good chance of being euthanized by the Humane Society. We do everything in our power to try and locate the owner of domestic pets before relinquishing control of the animal to the Humane Society. Please, have a collar with identification on your pet!! The last thing that we want is for your beloved pet to end up in a Humane Society animal incinerator.

 


Greater Androscoggin Rabies Alert

The Greater Androscoggin area is seeing a drastic increase in the number of rabies cases. The Maine CDC has received over a dozen animals from Auburn, Lewiston, Green and Turner that have tested positive with the rabies virus. The CDC only tests animals that have bitten a person or animal. That leaves dozens of animals, that are most likely rabies positive, untested. We are seeing a dramatic increase in the number of reported sick and dead animals in the area. If you have been bitten by a wild or domestic animal, call the police and report the incident, go to your doctor and get the rabies post exposure shot series and stay calm. Time is on your side. The virus takes time to incubate in your system. The shots are in the arm and are no more painful than a flue shot. If you choose to not get the shots please remember that the rabies virus is always fatal.