[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":250},["ShallowReactive",2],{"article:hantavirus:hantavirus-in-michigan":3},{"id":4,"title":5,"body":6,"category":204,"description":205,"extension":206,"faq":207,"image":217,"image_alt":218,"last_updated":219,"meta":220,"meta_description":221,"meta_title":222,"navigation":223,"path":224,"related":225,"risk_level":241,"seo":242,"sources":243,"stem":247,"subcategory":248,"__hash__":249},"hantavirus\u002Fhantavirus\u002Fhantavirus-in-michigan.md","Hantavirus in Michigan: What Cabin Owners and UP Hunters Need to Know",{"type":7,"value":8,"toc":194},"minimark",[9,13,18,21,33,43,50,54,57,60,63,70,98,102,105,108,112,115,121,127,133,137,140,167,170,174],[10,11,12],"p",{},"Michigan has a hunting and cabin culture deeply embedded in its outdoor identity — an estimated 1.5 million hunting licenses issued each year, and hundreds of thousands of seasonal properties across the state, many of them in the Upper Peninsula. That combination of remote structures and active rodent populations creates a recurring hantavirus exposure scenario that Michigan residents should understand.",[14,15,17],"h2",{"id":16},"michigans-two-hantavirus-zones","Michigan's Two Hantavirus Zones",[10,19,20],{},"Michigan splits into two distinct ecological zones, and both have hantavirus-carrying rodents.",[10,22,23,27,28,32],{},[24,25,26],"strong",{},"The Upper Peninsula"," is deer mouse (",[29,30,31],"em",{},"Peromyscus maniculatus",") territory. The same species responsible for the majority of western US HPS cases — the primary carrier of Sin Nombre virus and related strains — is present throughout the UP's boreal forests, hardwood stands, and brushy areas. This makes the UP the higher-risk zone in the state. Dense wilderness, abundant hunting camps and cabins, and a small permanent human population mean that structures are often left closed for months and receive irregular inspection.",[10,34,35,38,39,42],{},[24,36,37],{},"The Lower Peninsula"," is the range of the white-footed mouse (",[29,40,41],{},"Peromyscus leucopus","), which carries New York virus. This strain causes fewer documented cases nationally than Sin Nombre, but remains capable of causing HPS. White-footed mice thrive in the Lower Peninsula's mixed forests, agricultural edges, and wooded rural properties — particularly in the northern and central LP.",[10,44,45,46,49],{},"Neither the deer mouse nor the white-footed mouse is the common house mouse (",[29,47,48],{},"Mus musculus",") found in urban homes, restaurants, and suburban garages. House mice don't carry HPS-causing hantavirus. The species that matter for hantavirus look different — deer mice have a distinctive white underside and feet against a brown or grayish back, while house mice are uniformly gray-brown. But visual identification matters less than knowing which type of property and setting you're dealing with.",[14,51,53],{"id":52},"the-cabin-and-camp-problem","The Cabin and Camp Problem",[10,55,56],{},"Michigan's estimated 100,000+ seasonal properties — UP hunting camps, northern lake cabins, rural farm structures — are the primary setting for hantavirus exposure risk. Many of these structures sit empty from late October through early May, providing rodents with undisturbed overwintering habitat.",[10,58,59],{},"During those months, deer mice and white-footed mice nest inside walls, in stored mattresses and bedding, inside kitchen storage, and in insulation. By opening weekend — whether for fishing in May or deer season in November — months of accumulated droppings, nesting material, and urine occupy the enclosed space.",[10,61,62],{},"Entering a closed cabin or camp and disturbing that material — sweeping, shaking out bedding, running a forced-air furnace without first inspecting the ductwork — is where HPS exposure occurs. The virus becomes airborne when dried rodent waste is disturbed in an enclosed space.",[10,64,65,66,69],{},"The precautions are not complicated, but they require doing them ",[29,67,68],{},"before"," cleanup starts:",[71,72,73,80,86,92],"ol",{},[74,75,76,79],"li",{},[24,77,78],{},"Ventilate first",": Open all doors and windows and step outside for at least 30 minutes before spending time inside",[74,81,82,85],{},[24,83,84],{},"Don't sweep or vacuum dry droppings",": That's how you inhale virus particles",[74,87,88,91],{},[24,89,90],{},"Wet before touching",": Spray droppings with a bleach solution (1.5 cups bleach per gallon of water), let it soak for five minutes, then wipe up with paper towels",[74,93,94,97],{},[24,95,96],{},"Wear an N95 respirator",": Not a cloth mask, not a surgical mask — N95 filters fine particles",[14,99,101],{"id":100},"detroit-grand-rapids-and-urban-michigan","Detroit, Grand Rapids, and Urban Michigan",[10,103,104],{},"Michigan's urban and suburban areas carry effectively zero hantavirus risk. Detroit, Grand Rapids, Lansing, Flint, and Ann Arbor are not environments where deer mice or white-footed mice establish populations. The rodents present in these cities are house mice and Norway rats — neither of which carry HPS.",[10,106,107],{},"Urban and suburban residents who also own rural cabins or hunt in the UP face exposure risk tied to that activity, not their home address.",[14,109,111],{"id":110},"seasonal-pattern","Seasonal Pattern",[10,113,114],{},"The highest-risk periods in Michigan align with the seasonal calendar of the state's cabin and hunting culture:",[10,116,117,120],{},[24,118,119],{},"Spring (April–June)",": When seasonal cabins are opened for the first time after winter closure. Rodents have had four to six months of undisturbed activity in enclosed spaces. This is consistently the highest-risk opening period nationally.",[10,122,123,126],{},[24,124,125],{},"Fall (September–November)",": Hunting season brings people back into camps that may have been empty since spring. A second opening after summer dormancy creates a secondary exposure window.",[10,128,129,132],{},[24,130,131],{},"After high-acorn and mast years",": White-footed mouse populations boom following years of abundant forest seed production. Elevated rodent numbers the following year translate to higher virus reservoir pressure.",[14,134,136],{"id":135},"if-you-find-rodent-evidence-in-a-michigan-camp-or-cabin","If You Find Rodent Evidence in a Michigan Camp or Cabin",[10,138,139],{},"If there are droppings, gnaw marks, or nesting material in a property you're opening:",[141,142,143,149,155,161],"ul",{},[74,144,145,148],{},[24,146,147],{},"Do not enter and start cleaning immediately"," — ventilate the space first",[74,150,151,154],{},[24,152,153],{},"Check the HVAC system and ducting before running the furnace"," — rodents nest in ductwork, and forced air distributes contaminated particles throughout the space",[74,156,157,160],{},[24,158,159],{},"Be thorough",": droppings in one area often mean activity throughout the structure",[74,162,163,166],{},[24,164,165],{},"When in doubt about the scale of contamination",", contact a pest remediation professional trained in hantavirus protocols before attempting cleanup",[10,168,169],{},"If you develop fever, intense muscle aches, fatigue, or breathing difficulty within one to five weeks of a potential rodent exposure, seek medical care immediately and tell your doctor about the exposure. HPS moves quickly once respiratory symptoms begin — early hospital care significantly improves outcomes.",[14,171,173],{"id":172},"official-sources","Official Sources",[141,175,176,186],{},[74,177,178,185],{},[179,180,184],"a",{"href":181,"rel":182},"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.michigan.gov\u002Fmdhhs\u002F",[183],"nofollow","Michigan Department of Health and Human Services: Hantavirus"," — state surveillance and prevention guidance",[74,187,188,193],{},[179,189,192],{"href":190,"rel":191},"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.cdc.gov\u002Fhantavirus\u002F",[183],"CDC Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome"," — national disease information and prevention",{"title":195,"searchDepth":196,"depth":196,"links":197},"",2,[198,199,200,201,202,203],{"id":16,"depth":196,"text":17},{"id":52,"depth":196,"text":53},{"id":100,"depth":196,"text":101},{"id":110,"depth":196,"text":111},{"id":135,"depth":196,"text":136},{"id":172,"depth":196,"text":173},"hantavirus","Michigan's hantavirus risk is concentrated in the Upper Peninsula and rural northern Lower Michigan. Deer mice in the UP and white-footed mice in the south both carry the virus. Cabin and hunting camp season is the highest-risk period.","md",[208,211,214],{"question":209,"answer":210},"Is there hantavirus in Michigan?","Yes. Michigan has documented confirmed HPS cases, though the count is small. The Upper Peninsula has deer mice carrying Sin Nombre-related strains, while the Lower Peninsula hosts white-footed mice carrying New York virus. Both can cause HPS. Risk is concentrated in rural, wooded areas — particularly hunting camps and seasonal cabins.",{"question":212,"answer":213},"Is the Upper Peninsula (UP) higher risk than the Lower Peninsula?","Yes. The Upper Peninsula has a combination of deer mice and a more remote, heavily forested character that increases exposure opportunity. Hunting camps and UP cabins left empty between seasons accumulate rodent activity in a way that rural LP properties also can, but UP has more extensive deer mouse habitat. That said, both peninsulas have confirmed exposure potential.",{"question":215,"answer":216},"Are deer mice in Michigan different from house mice?","Yes, and the distinction matters. Deer mice (found mainly in the UP and northern Michigan) and white-footed mice (common in the Lower Peninsula) are the hantavirus-carrying species in Michigan. The common house mouse (Mus musculus), found in urban homes, does not carry HPS-causing hantavirus. Deer mice have a distinctly two-toned coat — brown back, white underside and feet — unlike the uniformly gray or brown house mouse.","\u002Fimages\u002Fhantavirus\u002Fhantavirus-in-michigan.webp","Michigan map showing the Upper Peninsula deer mouse range in the north and white-footed mouse range in the southern Lower Peninsula, with hantavirus risk zones marked","2026-05-21",{},"Hantavirus cases in Michigan are rare but real. The Upper Peninsula and rural northern Lower Michigan carry the most risk. Here's what cabin owners and hunters need to know.","Hantavirus in Michigan: Risk by Region and What to Know | RodentHealthRisk.com",true,"\u002Fhantavirus\u002Fhantavirus-in-michigan",[226,229,232,235,238],{"slug":227,"title":228},"hantavirus\u002Fhantavirus-cases-by-state","Hantavirus Cases by State",{"slug":230,"title":231},"rv-cabin\u002Fcleaning-cabin-after-winter-safely","Cleaning a Cabin After Winter Safely",{"slug":233,"title":234},"hantavirus\u002Fhantavirus-in-minnesota","Hantavirus in Minnesota",{"slug":236,"title":237},"guides\u002Fhow-to-clean-mouse-droppings-safely","How to Clean Mouse Droppings Safely",{"slug":239,"title":240},"hantavirus\u002Fhantavirus-in-ohio","Hantavirus in Ohio","low",{"title":5,"description":205},[244,245,246],"CDC","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.cdc.gov\u002Fhantavirus\u002Fphp\u002Fsurveillance\u002Findex.html","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.michigan.gov\u002Fmdhhs\u002Fkeep-mi-healthy\u002Fdiseases-and-illnesses\u002Fa-to-z\u002Fhantavirus","hantavirus\u002Fhantavirus-in-michigan","by-location","gWdUzzieyqTQC2_RL-3iupoESnxwfx4skHrnrCmWN1A",1779612275613]