11/04/2026
We Kill Her For Looking Wrong. She is the Safest Animal in Your Yard.
The security light snaps on, trapping a pale, pointed face and a bare tail in its harsh glare. The Virginia Opossum freezes in the spring grass.
We see her scruffy fur and fifty sharp teeth and immediately call animal control, assuming she is a dirty, disease-carrying threat to our families.
In reality, she is an ecological superhero. Because her exceptionally low natural body temperature (94–97°F) suppresses viral replication, she is virtually immune to rabies. Her blood contains a unique peptide that safely neutralizes the venom of native rattlesnakes and copperheads. Right now in April, this native Virginia Opossum (Didelphis virginiana, Status: Secure) is foraging overtime to nourish the tiny, developing joeys hidden safely inside her pouch.
While internet myths claim she eats thousands of ticks, her true interconnected ecological role is far broader. As the ultimate neighborhood cleanup crew, she tirelessly scavenges rotting fruit, venomous snakes, cockroaches, and disease-spreading rodents, preventing decay and pest outbreaks across our suburban food webs.
You can protect this gentle, misunderstood marsupial. Keep your dogs inside at night, drive carefully after dusk, and if you see her on your porch, simply let her pass.
She doesn't carry the diseases we fear; she eats the pests we hate. Leave her the yard.