

Rodent and Pest Inspection Black Lights for Finding Invisible Stains. Rodent hair glows blue-white and is easily identified on sacks or intermixed with food grains. Dry rodent urine glows a blue-white if fresh to a yellow-white if old. To inspect for rodent presence, just illuminate the area in question with one of our UV lights. This is especially true in older establishments where construction and/or location make it more difficult to discover rodent activity. For sanitation purposes, it is necessary to identify rodent presence in many areas such as the food industry, where you need to inspection from the large industrial plant to the small retail outlet, everywhere the food goes.

Ultraviolet light itself is invisible to the human eye, but can cause materials such as rodent urine and other organic materials to visibly fluoresce. Rodent detection: The urine of many animals, including cats and rodents will fluoresce under our UV.

This increases your ability to detect the mammal urine, mammal bodily fluids, and the presence of scorpions with ease. This LED black light shows the tiniest amount of urine with a greater visibility than other LED black lights. Because this UV light has a higher grade LED, it has a better contrast and visibility then than other LED black lights. It is solid state design and is engineered to last. The UV black lights is an industrial grade design with durability. Use our lights to check for damage to your stock, we have large units SUPERTAC-395 and BMONSTER-395 which has a long throw. Watch for reactions of dogs and cats since they have better sensory perception then humans. Any type urine stains once again use our black lights for this. Mice and rat runways are easy to see since they urinate in transit, the UV lights illuminate this very well. Any sight of live and dead rodents Animal and rat feces (animal droppings) are easy to see with our black lights. Here are a few: Look for any sign of burrows or other potential living quarters. There are many ways you can discover the signs of rodent activity to check for, especially when using one of our black lights.
