Two mice who have spent 600 days at RSPCA Suffolk Central after being rescued are looking for their forever home.
The branch is issuing an urgent rehoming appeal for the multimammate mice who were rescued by the RSPCA and have been at the centre since 2023.
This was after being spray-painted and released in a fast-food chain as part of a protest.
They have now been at the centre for almost 600 days.
The two girls were named after types of apples - Pippen and Braeburn.
Can you give this mice her forever home? (Image: RSPCA)
A spokesperson for the branch said: "These little girls have been with us so long they are now at a very old age in mouse years, and we are worried the girls will spend the rest of their lives without a home.
"It would be just amazing if we could potentially find them a perfect home to live out the rest of their days with a loving family to call their own.
"These apple-named girls are full of life and curiosity and enjoy exploring their cage, foraging for food, and burrowing down for a long daytime sleep.
"They are ready to find a forever home where they can live a happy life."
Multimammate mice are bigger than other mice, and a large space is essential to allow them to exhibit natural behaviour and keep them stimulated and happy.
They need a home that can provide them with a large and spacious tank, with enough depth for a deep substrate for essential burrowing.
They enjoy each other's company and rely on each other for comfort, as they are often seen sharing the same bed snuggled together, so they won't want a home with other mice.
Marge, Clover, Olive and Flora (Image: RSPCA)
Also, looking for a home are Marge, Clover, Olive and Flora, who are four girls aged around seven months old.
They came into the branch after being kept in inappropriate conditions.
The mice are very curious and love to explore their surroundings.
When they first arrived they would hide away all the time, but now their confidence is slowly building.
The girls love to climb, run, jump, burrow, and explore, which makes appropriate accommodation really important.
Also they will need to have a tank-style enclosure with roof ventilation to allow for the correct set-up of their new home.
They are still nervous and do not like being handled so to help them gain confidence, the branch is looking for a patient owner who appreciates watching from afar with no expectation of handling right away.
Over time, it is thought they could become more confident and sociable with the correct, slow interactions.