Rat

From New World Encyclopedia
Rats
Fossil range: Early Pleistocene - Recent
Black Rat (Rattus rattus)
Black Rat (Rattus rattus)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Rodentia
Superfamily: Muroidea
Family: Muridae
Subfamily: Murinae
Genus: Rattus
Fischer de Waldheim, 1803
Species

50 species; see text
*Several subfamilies of Muroids
include animals called rats.

Rats are various medium sized rodents. "True rats" are members of the genus Rattus, the most important of which to humans are the black rat, Rattus rattus, and the brown rat, R. norvegicus. Many members of other rodent genera and families are also called rats and share many characteristics with true rats.

Rats are distinguished from mice by their size; rats generally have bodies longer than 12 cm (5 inches). Squirrels of most species are about the same size as rats but are members of their own family, Sciuridae, and are usually more specialized than rats.

General rat characteristics

Like most smaller rodents, true rats and most other rats mature rapidly and only live for a short time. The black rat reaches sexual maturity in 80 days; its longest recorded life was 4 years and 2 months (Nowak 1986). Most rat species breed several times each year and have multiple offspring. This lets their populations rapidly expand to take advantage of changes in their environments and also replaces individuals lost to predators.

Most rats are omnivores, eating both plant and animal foods, and generalists, not bound to one specialized way of life. Among the exceptions to this are the mole rats of Africa (Bathyergidae family), especially the naked mole rat (Heterocephalus glaber), which are highy specialized and live almost their entire lives underground eating bulbs, roots, and tubers. The fish-eating rats of South America (Ichthyomys species) swim in streams to catch small fish. Kangaroo rats of North America (Dipodomys species) live in desert evironments and do not need to drink; they get the water they need from the seeds and insects they eat (Nowak 1986).

The genus Rattus

The genus Rattus, true rats, is one of the largest genera of mammals including as many as 78 species (Nowak 1986). True rats are native to Southeast Asia, Australia, and the nearby islands. Some species build nests in trees while other burrow into the ground. Most live in groups ranging from a few individuals to one hundred or more. Rats fight to establish dominance within the group but rarely kill or injure each other. Sometimes females within a group will nurse each other's young.

True rats are opportunistic feeders, eating seeds, fruit, vegetables, insects, other small animals. Most true rats live in forests or near rivers or other bodies of water. In Australia some species live in grasslands and desert environments.

Rats as pests

Some species of rats, both true rats and rats of other genera, have become very successful by taking advantage of human activities. The black rat, which is naturally a tree dwelling species, found nesting places and food in barns, houses, and other buildings and spread around the world with the the unwitting help of humans. It is also known as the roof rat and the ship rat. The brown rat is a ground dweller and naturally digs its burrows near water. It expanded

Domesticated rats

The Rat

The best-known rat species are the Black Rat Rattus rattus and the Brown Rat R. norvegicus. There is also one type of rat called Tars, usually found on Mount Everest. The group is generally known as the Old World rats or true rats, and originated in Asia. Rats are bigger than most of their relatives, the Old World mice, but seldom weigh over 500 grams (1 lb) in the wild. The common term "rat" is also used in the names of other small mammals which are not true rats. Examples include the North American pack rats, a number of species loosely called kangaroo rats, and a number of others. Other rats such as the Bandicoot rat Bandicota bengalensis are murine rodents related to the true rats, but are not members of the genus Rattus. The widely distributed and problematic commensal species of rats represent a minority in this diverse genus. Many species of rats are island endemics and some have become endangered due to habitat loss or competition with brown, black, or Polynesian rats.

In Western countries, many people keep domesticated rats as pets. These are of the species R. norvegicus, which originated in the grasslands of China and spread to Europe and eventually, in 1775, to the New World. Pet rats are Brown Rats descended from those bred for research, and are often called "fancy rats", but they are still the same species as the common city "sewer" rat. Domesticated rats tend to be both more docile than their wild ancestors and more disease prone, presumably due to inbreeding.

The common species are opportunistic survivors and often live with and near humans. The Black Plague is traditionally believed to have been caused by the micro-organism Yersinia pestis, carried by the rat flea Xenopsylla cheopis which preyed on R. rattus living in European cities of the day; it is notable that these rats were victims of the plague themselves. It has recently been suggested that neither rats nor infected fleas would have spread fast enough through Europe to be a likely culprit, although this is controversial and research continues.[citation needed] Regardless, rats are frequently blamed for damaging food supplies and other goods. Their reputation has carried into common parlance: in the English language, "rat" is an insult and "to rat on someone" is to betray them by denouncing to the authorities a crime or misdeed they committed. While modern wild rats can carry Leptospirosis and some other "zoonotic" conditions (those which can be transferred across species, to humans, for example), these conditions are in fact rarely found.[citation needed] Wild rats living in good environments are typically healthy and robust animals. Wild rats living in cities may suffer themselves from poor diet and internal parasites and mites, but do not generally spread disease to humans.

Rats have a normal lifespan ranging from two to five years, though three years is typical.

Laughter in rats

It was discovered that rats emit short, high frequency, ultrasonic, socially induced vocalization during rough and tumble play, and when tickled. The vocalization is described as a distinct “chirping”. Humans cannot hear the “chirping” without special equipment. It was also discovered that like humans, rats have “tickle skin”. These are certain areas of the body which generate more laughter response than other areas. The laughter is associated with positive emotional feelings and social bonding occurs with the human tickler, resulting in the rats becoming conditioned to seek the tickling. Additional responses to the tickling were those that laughed the most also played the most, and those that laughed the most preferred to spend more time with other laughing rats. This suggests a social preference to other rats exhibiting similar responses. However, as the rats age, there does appear to be a decline in the tendency to laugh and respond to tickle skin. The initial goal of Jaak Panksepp & Jeff Burgdorf’s research was to track the biological origins of joyful and social processes of the brain by comparing rats and their relationship to the joy and laughter commonly experienced by children in social play. Although, the research was unable to prove rats have a sense of humor, it did indicate rats can laugh and express joy. Panksepp & Burgdorf 2003 Chirping by rats is also reported in additional studies by Brian Knutson of the National Institutes of Health. Rats chirp when wrestling one another, before receiving morphine, or having sex. The sound has been interpreted as an expectation of something rewarding. Science News 2001

Eastern cultures

File:Netsukerat.jpg
A Netsuke of a rat from Japan.

In Imperial Chinese culture, the rat (sometimes referred to as a mouse) is the first of the twelve animals of the Chinese zodiac. People born in this year are expected to possess qualities associated with rats. These include creativity, honesty, generosity, ambition, a quick temper and wastefulness. "Rats" (i.e. people born in a year of the rat) are said to get along well with "monkeys" and "dragons," and to get along poorly with "horses."

File:Rat temple.jpg
The indigenous rats are allowed to run freely throughout the Karni Mata temple.

In India in the northwestern city of Deshnoke, the Karni Mata Temple, the rats are held to be destined for reincarnation as Sadhus, Hindu holy men. The attending priests feed milk and grain, of which the pilgrims also partake, to the animals. Eating food that has been touched by the animals is considered a blessing from god.

Western cultures

Western associations with the rat are generally negative. For instance, "Rats!" is used as a substitute for various vulgar interjections. These associations do not draw, per se, from any biological or behavioral trait of the rat, but possibly from the association of rats (and fleas) with the 14th-century medieval plague called the Black Death. Rats are seen as vicious, unclean, parasitic animals that steal food and spread disease. However many people in Western cultures keep rats as pets and conversely find them to be tame, clean, intelligent, and playful. While undomesticated rats, dogs, and cats may all be pests in urban areas, in Western countries poisoning rats is commonly accepted, while doing the same to feral dogs and cats would be an unpopular solution in the view of many people.

Describing a person as "rat-like" usually implies he is unattractive and suspicious. In contrast, mice are stereotyped as cute and bourgeois.

Rat is also a term (noun and verb) in criminal (often Mafia) slang for a criminal informant.

Rats are often used in scientific experiments; many animal rights activists allege that treatment of rats in this context is cruel. The term "lab rat" is therefore sometimes used, like guinea pig, to describe a person who is manipulated in a social experiment.

Rats as vermin

Brown Rat (Rattus norvegicus)

By most standards, rats are considered pests or vermin. They can be very destructive to crops and property. Rats can quickly overpopulate when they live in a place where they have no predators, such as in certain cities, and their numbers can become hard to contain. Because of this, the entire province of Alberta, Canada has upheld and maintained a rat-free status since the early 1950s[1]; it is even illegal to keep pet rats there.

Rats have a significant impact on food production. Estimates vary, but it is likely that anything between one-fifth and one-third of the world's total food output is eaten, spoiled or destroyed by rats and other rodents.[2]

Rats can carry over thirty different diseases dangerous to humans, including Weil's disease, typhus, salmonella and bubonic plague. Black rats are suspected to have had a role in the Black Death, an epidemic which killed at least 75 million people in Europe, the Middle East, and Asia in the mid-late 14th century.

A variety of rat control methods have been used throughout human history to either reduce or eliminate rat populations in homes, markets, farms, and industrial sites. The two most widely used methods are rat poison and rat traps, though cats and dogs have also been employed to hunt rats. Professional rat-catchers can be found in many developing countries.

Because rats are nocturnal, daytime sightings of rat activity can mean that their nesting areas have been disturbed or, more likely, that there is overpopulation of them in the local area. [3] It is typically at this point that vermin control measures tend to increase.

Rats often chew electrical cables. Around 26% of all electrical cable breaks are caused by rats, and around 18% of all phone cable breaks. Around 25% of all fires of unknown origin are estimated to be caused by rats.[4]

Rats, particularly roof rats (Rattus rattus), can enter the attics of homes where they mate and nest. This problem occurs commonly in coastal, temperate climates and affects even the cleanest, well-kept homes.

Jack Black, her majesty's ratcatcher, 1851
Laboratory rat in water maze experiment
File:RatBaiting2.jpg
Rat-baiting pit

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Barnett, S. A. 2001. The Story of Rats: Their Impact on Us, and Our Impact on Them. Crows Nest, NSW, Australia : Allen & Unwin. ISBN 1-86508-519-7 .
  • IUCN Species Survival Commission (IUCN). 2007. .2007 ICUN Red List of Threatened Species. International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources. Retrieved March , 2007.
  • Invasive Species Specialist Group (ISSG). 2007. Global invasive species database: Rattus rattus. Invasive Species Specialist Group Website. Retrieved March , 2007.
  • Nowak, R. M., and J. L. Paradiso. 1983. Walker's Mammals of the World. Baltimore, Maryland: The Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0801825253.
  • Voelker, W. 1986. The Natural History of Living Mammals. Medford, New Jersey: Plexus Publishing, Inc. ISBN 0937548081.

Further reading and references

  • Leung LKP, Peter G. Cox, G. C. Jahn and Robert Nugent. 2002. Evaluating rodent management with Cambodian rice farmers. Cambodian Journal of Agriculture Vol. 5, pp. 21-26.
  • Musser, G. G. and M. D. Carleton. 1993. Family Muridae. Pp. 501-755 in Mammal Species of the World a Taxonomic and Geographic Reference. D. E. Wilson and D. M. Reeder eds. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington D.C.
  • Nowak, R. M. 1999. Walker's Mammals of the World, Vol. 2. Johns Hopkins University Press, London.
  • Sullivan, Robert. 2004. Rats - A Year with New York´s Most Unwanted Inhabitants. Granta Books, London.
  • Sullivan, Robert. 2005. Rats: Observations on the History and Habitat of the City's Most Unwanted Inhabitants. Bloomsbury USA. ISBN 1-58234-477-9
File:Dipodomys ordii.jpg
Ord's kangaroo rat, Dipodomys ordii
File:Nacktmull.jpg
Naked mole rat, Heterocephalus glaber
Pet brown rat.

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