Opossums

What to do if you find a Virginia Opossum

If you have found an Opossum in need of immediate help, please click here for information.

How to Coexist with Opossums

  1. Opossums will feed on human refuse; close garbage with tight lids and pick up bird seed off the ground.
  2. Do not leave pet food or water outside.
  3. Secure dog doors and cat doors at night; this is often the way wildlife gets into homes.
  4. Place ammonia-soaked rags or mothballs in the area where opossums frequent in/near your home.

About Virginia Opossums (Didelphis virginiana)

  • Only living marsupial native to North America
  • Has a hairless prehensile tail that can grasp branches
  • Too heavy to hang by its prehensile tail
  • Natural habitats are deciduous forests and wetlands
  • Nocturnal (night-active)
  • Adults about the size of a domestic cat
  • Predators are owls, foxes, and domestic dogs
  • Solitary Opportunistic Omnivore (eats both animals and plants)
  • Females can be very aggressive when protecting their babies
  • When attacked, they play "possum" (act dead)
  • Babies are born the size of a bee
  • Females have fur-lined pouch where babies crawl, grow and drink milk

Virginia Opossum Facts

  • People fear opossums due to rabies, but they aren't common carriers of rabies
  • Opossums are generally shy and avoid people
  • Raid garbage cans at night for food (opportunistic)
  • Many opossums are killed on roads each year because they are often blinded by headlights
  • Opossums are helpful by cleaning up dead animals (carrion) on the road
  • They also help to control rodent and insect populations