Striped Skunk
Mephitis mephitis
Striped skunks are an occasional but high-impact commercial wildlife pest. For food service operations with outdoor dining areas, skunk denning in adjacent landscape features creates a constant spray risk that can disrupt operations and customers with devastating suddenness.
For facilities with landscaped grounds, lawn damage from skunk grub-digging can be extensive and creates a poor impression for customers and visitors.
The threat of spray in a commercial context — near an outdoor kitchen vent, in a restaurant patio area, or at a hotel entrance — represents both an immediate operational disruption and a liability risk if customers or employees are sprayed.
Habitat
Commercial skunk habitat typically involves ground-level voids adjacent to landscaped areas: spaces beneath loading dock platforms, under commercial outbuildings and storage sheds, in large ornamental planting beds with open soil, beneath concrete steps at building entrances, and in any void at the base of a commercial building’s foundation.
Facilities with extensive turf areas and white grub populations face the combined challenges of lawn damage from foraging and denning skunks that are attracted by the grub food resource.
Active Areas
Windsor
Tecumseh
LaSalle
Amherstburg
Lakeshore
Essex
Kingsville
Leamington
Chatham-Kent
Moderate prevalence in rural and suburban areas of Chatham-Kent. Denning under decks and sheds is a common spring conflict.
St. Thomas
Moderate prevalence in suburban St. Thomas. Skunks are regularly found denning under structures in residential neighbourhoods.
Seasonality
Commercial pest management should focus skunk activity on March–October, with the most intensive management focus in April–August.
Pre-season inspections in March should identify and seal den sites before the spring breeding season begins. Late-season inspections in September–October ensure that exclusion materials are intact before individuals enter winter torpor in or near the building.
Year-round food source security management is the most effective year-round commercial skunk prevention strategy.
Spring
Summer
Autumn
Winter
Appearance
For commercial wildlife identification, the skunk’s colouration is unique in Ontario — no other wild mammal has the black-and-white striped pattern.
Evidence identification is equally straightforward: the unmistakable odour, conical grub-digging holes in turf, and tracks (five-toed front prints with prominent claw marks, similar in size to a domestic cat’s but with the distinctive skunk toe pattern) are all diagnostic.
Commercial pest logs should document skunk sightings with location, time, and the specific evidence observed.
- Glossy black body with a narrow white forehead stripe that splits into a broad V-pattern of two white stripes running along the back to the tail
- Bushy, plume-like black tail with white tip and white fringe
- Can accurately spray sulphur-compound musk from anal scent glands up to 5 metres
- Musky odour is detectable at distances of over a kilometre under suitable wind conditions
- Frequently dens under decks, porches, sheds, and concrete stoops — any low, dark, sheltered void at ground level
- Lawn damage from shallow digging (cone-shaped excavations) in search of white grubs is a diagnostic sign
Behaviour
Skunk behaviour in commercial settings is driven by the availability of food and den sites. Skunks are creatures of habit — once a reliable food source and safe denning site is established on a commercial property, the same individuals will return night after night throughout the active season.
Eliminating food attractions (grub control, secured waste) and den access (exclusion of under-deck and under-slab voids) are the most effective long-term deterrents.
Staff at commercial facilities with known skunk presence should be trained in appropriate avoidance behaviour to reduce spray incidents.
Lifecycle
Birth / Kit
Active denning with kits under a commercial building’s accessible void requires immediate escalation to a licensed wildlife management professional.
Commercial operations should not attempt to block, exclude, or disturb an active skunk den with kits — the defensive spray risk during kit rearing is extremely high and the operational disruption from a large-scale spray incident in a commercial setting can be severe.
Juvenile
Juvenile skunks foraging independently in late summer and autumn represent a secondary pressure period for commercial properties, as new individuals explore and establish territories.
Commercial exclusion of den sites should be maintained and inspected in September to ensure no new access points have been created during the juvenile dispersal period.
Adult
Adult skunks using a commercial property represent a sustained management priority through the active season (March–November).
Commercial pest management programmes should include skunk-specific items in monthly service visit checklists, particularly evidence surveys of ground-level voids, turf damage, and odour reports from staff. Any confirmed skunk denning on a commercial property should trigger an immediate management response.
Signs You May Have a Problem
- Persistent faint musky odour near ground-level building features, landscape beds, or waste storage areas
- Conical grub-digging holes scattered across turf areas on the property, particularly in high-grub-density zones
- Disturbed soil at the base of loading dock platforms, concrete steps, outbuilding perimeters, or foundation voids
- Five-toed tracks with claw marks near den sites or waste storage areas
- Staff reports of skunk sightings at dawn or dusk in the waste area, near landscaping, or at building entrances
- Spray incident affecting a staff member, customer, or pet on the property — the highest-impact and most unambiguous sign
Risks & Concerns
Commercial spray incidents near outdoor dining, building entrances, or ventilation intakes can disrupt operations immediately and for an extended period — skunk spray odour in a restaurant or hotel is not quickly resolved and may require closure and professional odour remediation.
The liability implications of a customer or employee being sprayed on a commercial property are significant, particularly if documented skunk presence was not managed.
Skunk rabies risk applies equally in commercial contexts — a skunk on commercial property exhibiting abnormal behaviour requires immediate reporting to public health authorities and cessation of operations in the affected area until the animal is removed.
Prevention
- Seal all ground-level voids under decks, loading platforms, concrete steps, and outbuildings using hardware cloth buried 15 cm into the soil and bent outward in an L-shape to prevent digging under
- Implement a grub management programme for all turf areas on the property to reduce the food resource that attracts skunks to the grounds
- Secure all dumpsters and waste containers with positive-locking lids and ensure no food waste is accessible from exterior areas overnight
- Install motion-sensor exterior lighting in areas with known skunk activity — nocturnal lighting discourages skunks from remaining in exposed areas
- Train staff in appropriate skunk avoidance behaviour: move slowly and calmly, allow the animal a clear exit route, and never corner or rush toward a skunk
- Establish and document a staff protocol for skunk sightings on the property, including the contact procedure for the pest management provider and the first aid / decontamination procedure for spray incidents
DIY Control
- Contact a licensed wildlife management professional before attempting any commercial skunk management — the spray risk in a commercial context is too high for untrained personnel
- Implement food source security measures immediately as a first step — secured waste containers and grub management reduce the attractant without any spray risk
- Document all skunk evidence — sightings, digging locations, odour reports — with dates and locations for the pest management provider
- Isolate the den site area with physical barriers and clear signage while awaiting professional service to protect customers and staff from accidental encounters
Professional Control
- Licensed wildlife management service including den site assessment, live trapping with full spray prevention protocol, and relocation in compliance with the Ontario Fish and Wildlife Conservation Act
- Professional exclusion installation at all identified and potential den sites on the property, with documentation for facility records
- Emergency odour remediation service with 24/7 availability for spray incidents at commercial facilities
- Ongoing wildlife management programme including scheduled seasonal inspections, grub management consultation, and full documentation of all activities for pest management programme records and insurance files