On this page you’ll find a wide variety of downloadable posters, flyers, and more to put up in your neighborhood, display at events, and share with friends. (And check out our new RATS Activist Toolkit.)
Click any link, then print and pass them out, post on telephone poles and community bulletin boards, in schools and cafes, and wherever else you think of. And always feel free to share online—sharing a link on Facebook or Twitter or in email is fast and effective!
Keep an eye here: we regularly add new images and series, including translated versions. Print, share, download! And thank you for helping our wildlife in so many ways.
Rat Poison Kills More Than Rats (barred owl)
Rat Poison Kills More Than Rats (great horned owl)
Rat Poison Is Wildlife Poison (owl with bait box)
Rat Poison Is Wildlife Poison
RATS Brochure
Got Rats? Posters
Three Owls Bookmark
Toxic Food Web
Poster-sized (24×28) version of Toxic Food Web
The Bait Box Cycle
Barn Owl with Poison-Green Mouse (also in multiple languages)
Mice Eaten By Barn Owl in One Year
Barn Owl Door Hanger
Rat Poison Is Wildlife Poison series (also in Spanish)
Got Pests? – Raptors On The Job series
Raptors In This Area – Please Don’t Use Poison series (also in Spanish)
Currently Available Poisons
Poison = Profits
RATS Brochure
Help us get the word out! Our brochure is packed with important info and reminders about the harm poison does to non-target wildlife, pets, and children, and about its devastating effect on the natural ecosystem. We list the most dangerous and widely used poisons, and include tips to keep rodents away without killing and harming other animals.
Click here to print, share, or download on your home printer (you can print as two sheets).
If you are using a professional printer, click here for the highest resolution version. We encourage municipalities and other agencies to have them printed and make available to the public or use on their websites.
Got Rats? Posters
Our Got Rats? posters, created with the help of experts including a pest control company, highlight numerous ways to keep rodents away without using poison and other harmful methods. Click links to share, download, or print!
Got Rodents on your Family Farm?
Toxic Food Web
(UPDATED with more wildlife + bait box label)
Click here to print out, share or download our latest Toxic Food Web poster showing that whatever an animal eats, especially poison, travels up the food chain.
Click here to print out a black and white version for you or your favorite kids to color in yourselves. This would make a great school or Saturday afternoon project!
The Bait Box Cycle
Print out, share or download our Bait Box Cycle poster showing how bait boxes actually make the problem worse (while filling the pockets of professional companies using the poisons).
Barn Owl with Poison-Green Mouse
Barn owl with poisoned rodent—This very popular poster went viral on our Facebook page. Like many RATS posters, it was created by Jackie Nott of Sparkly Pony. And it’s being shared all over the world! We continue to add versions in other languages:
African: Sesotho, Swahili, Tsonga, Venda, Xhosa, Zulu
Chinese
Dutch
French
German
Hebrew
Italian
Norwegian
Portuguese
Russian
Slovenian
Mice Eaten By Barn Owl In One Year
Barn owl silhouette—Download, share, and print out this poster showing that a barn owl can eat 1000 rodents—in just one year!
Three Owls Bookmark
Our brand new three owls bookmark shows three of our favorite night-shift owls on the job: the Western Screech Owl, the Barn Owl, and the Great Horned Owl. This is a perfect item to print, cut out and share with your friends.
There’s also a fun black-and-white version for coloring in yourself!
Barn Owl Door Hanger
Our barn owl door hanger is ready for you or your favorite kids to color in, cut out, and hang up. Just download or print—and please share!
Rat Poison Is Wildlife Poison series
Rat Poison Kills More Than Rats (great horned owl) (NEW)
Rat Poison Kills More Than Rats (long-tailed weasel)
Rat Poison Is Raptor Poison (great horned owl)
Rat Poison Is Owl Poison (barn owls)
Red-tailed hawk
Swainson’s hawk
Barn owl
Burrowing owl
Bobcat
Jackrabbit 1
Jackrabbit 2
Cottontail 1
Cottontail 2
Fox
Mountain lion
Northern harrier (Spanish)
Northern saw-whet owl (Spanish)
Cooper’s hawk with rat (Spanish)
Got Pests? – Raptors On The Job series
Golden eagle
Short-eared owl
Barn owl
Burrowing owl
American kestrel
American kestrel 2
Swainson’s hawk
Swainson’s hawk 2
Swainson’s hawk 3
Red-tailed hawk
Red-tailed hawk 2
Red-tailed hawk 3
Red-tailed hawk 4
Red-tailed hawk 5
Great horned owl
Great horned owl 2
White-tailed kite
Cooper’s hawk
Northern harrier
Raptors Live/Nest In This Area – Please Don’t Use Poison series
Bald Eagle
Barred owl
Turkey vulture
Cooper’s hawk
Red-shouldered hawk
Red-tailed hawk
Barn owl
Great horned owl
Swainson’s hawk
Screech owl
Cooper’s hawk (Spanish)
Red-shouldered hawk (Spanish)
Red-tailed hawk (Spanish)
Barn owl (Spanish)
Great horned owl (Spanish)
Swainson’s hawk (Spanish)
Currently Available Poisons
Although all “second generation” anticoagulant poisons should have been removed from consumer shelves as of April 1, 2015, pest control companies can still use them, and dangerous products remain on the shelves, including “first generation” anticoagulants and other, new poisons. See our chart of those products here.
Note that in California, under AB 1788, which went into effect January 1, 2021, pest control companies are no longer allowed to use second generation anticoagulants for homeowner pest control.
Poison = Profits
Download and print this diagram showing how pest control operators guarantee continuing profits by using poisons.