Animal Droppings

Identify scat and droppings found around your home

Droppings are one of the most reliable clues an animal leaves behind — size, shape, color, and location narrow the field quickly. Rabbit pellets look nothing like rat droppings, and raccoon latrines are distinctive enough to identify from a photo. One rule before you investigate: never handle droppings with bare hands, and avoid sweeping dry droppings indoors or in enclosed spaces, since some can carry pathogens. These guides help you identify what you found from a safe distance and decide whether it's a shrug or a call to a professional.

Animal Droppings guides

Black Droppings on Your Patio: Rat, Mouse, Bat, or Bird? Black droppings on a patio most often come from mice, rats, or bats, with birds and squirrels as runners-up. Mouse droppings are about 1/4 inch with pointed ends, rat droppings run 1/2 to 3/4 inch with blunt ends, and bat droppings look mouse-sized but crumble into shiny insect fragments. Where the droppings sit — piled under the eaves versus scattered along a wall — narrows it down fast. Read the guide → Droppings in the Garage: Mouse, Rat, Bat, or Squirrel? Droppings in a garage are most often from mice, with rats, bats, and squirrels as the other usual suspects. Mouse droppings are 1/4-inch pellets with pointed ends scattered along walls and shelves; rat droppings are two to three times larger with blunt ends; bat droppings pile up in one spot beneath a roost near the ceiling or wall top. Before you identify anything, know the cleanup rule: never sweep or vacuum rodent droppings dry. Read the guide → Droppings in Your Shed: Mouse, Rat, or Something Bigger? Mice are by far the most common source of droppings in a shed — look for 1/4-inch pellets with pointed ends scattered along walls, shelves, and inside boxes. Larger blunt-ended pellets suggest rats, droppings the size of a small dog's point to an opossum, and a smeared brown deposit with a chalky white cap means a snake has been hunting the rodents. Whatever you find, clean it up wet, not dry. Read the guide → Droppings on Your Deck Railing: What's Running the Rails? Droppings on a deck railing are most often from mice, which treat railings as elevated highways between the yard and your house, leaving 1/4-inch pointed pellets scattered along the route. White splotches point to birds perching overhead, and a small pile of crumbly dark pellets beneath the eaves suggests a bat roost above. Where the droppings sit — spread along the rail versus piled in one spot — is your best first clue. Read the guide → Droppings That Look Like Coffee Grounds: Frass or Guano? A pile that looks like spilled coffee grounds is very often not droppings at all — it's carpenter ant frass, the sawdust-like debris ants push out of wood they're excavating, and it's a warning sign worth taking seriously. The other candidates are drywood termite pellets (hard, uniform, six-sided), bat guano (crumbles into shiny powder), and ordinary mouse droppings. Where the pile sits — under a window sill, beam, or roost — usually tells you which one you have. Read the guide → Droppings Under Your Deck: What Animal Is Denning There? Droppings under a deck usually mean an animal is using the space as a den, not just passing through — most often a skunk, opossum, feral cat, or raccoon, and occasionally a groundhog. Skunk droppings are crumbly and full of shiny insect parts, opossum droppings are large and curved, cat droppings are often buried in loose soil, and a pile of tubular droppings in one corner is a raccoon latrine that needs professional-level caution. Timing matters: from spring into midsummer, most of these animals have babies down there. Read the guide → Green Droppings on Your Lawn: Geese, Rabbits, or the Dog? Green droppings on a lawn are almost always from Canada geese — their waste is tubular, about 2 to 3 inches long, and green to greenish-brown because their diet is nearly all grass. Small round pellets with a green tint point to rabbits feeding on fresh spring growth, and a green-tinged pile of normal dog waste usually just means a dog that's been eating grass. If you live near a pond, lake, golf course, or park, geese are the answer most of the time. Read the guide → Large Droppings in Your Yard: Raccoon, Coyote, Dog, or Fox? Large droppings in a yard usually come from raccoons, coyotes, neighborhood dogs, or foxes. Raccoon droppings are tubular with blunt ends and often accumulate in one repeated spot called a latrine; coyote droppings are rope-like and tapered with visible fur, bone, or seeds; fox droppings are smaller, twisted, and pointed at the ends. A raccoon latrine deserves special caution because of raccoon roundworm. Read the guide → Small Pellet Droppings in Yard: Rabbit, Deer, or Squirrel? Small pellet droppings scattered across a yard are most often left by rabbits, deer, or squirrels. Rabbits drop round, pea-size pellets in loose clusters on the lawn, deer leave larger oval pellets in concentrated piles of 20 or more, and squirrel droppings are barrel-shaped and scattered under trees. Where the pellets show up — open lawn versus garden edge — is as telling as their shape. Read the guide → Tiny Black Specks on Your Deck: Frass, Fungus, or Droppings? Tiny black specks on a deck usually turn out to be caterpillar frass raining down from trees overhead, artillery fungus spores that glue themselves to surfaces, spider droppings, or mouse droppings. The quickest test is whether the specks wipe away: frass and droppings brush off, while artillery fungus dots are stuck fast. Where the specks appear — under a tree canopy, near mulch, or along the house wall — points to the source. Read the guide → Tubular Droppings in the Garden: Raccoon, Opossum, or Skunk? Tubular droppings in a garden bed most often come from raccoons, opossums, or skunks raiding for produce, grubs, and insects — though garter snakes and even toads leave surprisingly substantial droppings too. Blunt ends and berry seeds point to raccoon, tapered curves to opossum, and a crumbly texture full of shiny insect parts to skunk. Because raccoon droppings can carry roundworm eggs, droppings in a food garden also raise a produce-safety question worth taking seriously. Read the guide → White Droppings on Your Fence: Which Bird (or Lizard) Was It? White droppings on a fence are almost always from birds — the white part is uric acid, which is how birds excrete waste instead of urine. The size and pattern tell you whether it's songbirds using the fence as a perch, larger birds like doves or hawks, or, in the southern U.S., geckos and anoles, whose small dark droppings carry a distinctive white tip. Light deposits are harmless; large accumulations deserve careful cleanup. Read the guide →

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