{"id":388,"date":"2025-02-03T21:20:00","date_gmt":"2025-02-03T22:20:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/audiomateria.com\/?p=388"},"modified":"2025-02-21T19:14:26","modified_gmt":"2025-02-21T19:14:26","slug":"hate-rats-then-you-wont-love-this-new-study-2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/audiomateria.com\/index.php\/2025\/02\/03\/hate-rats-then-you-wont-love-this-new-study-2\/","title":{"rendered":"Hate rats? Then you won\u2019t love this new study."},"content":{"rendered":"
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A brown rat, the species commonly found in New York City and other major cities. | Getty Images<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

If we are, as some city officials have said<\/a>, in a war with rats, we are clearly losing. We\u2019ve been losing for years.<\/p>\n

Although cities have ramped up<\/a> their use of poisons and traps, the number of rats in places like New York City, San Francisco, and Toronto has increased in recent years, according to a new study<\/a> published in the journal Science Advances. <\/em>The researchers analyzed rat complaints and inspection reports for 16 cities that had consistent, long-term data available. More than two-thirds of those cities saw a significant increase in rat sightings.<\/p>\n

Washington, DC, had the largest increase in sightings over roughly the last decade, according to the study, which is the most comprehensive assessment of city rats to date.<\/p>\n

\u201cWe are on our heels and being pushed backward,\u201d Jonathan Richardson<\/a>, the study\u2019s lead author and an ecologist at the University of Richmond, said about the fight against rat infestations.<\/p>\n

There\u2019s more bad news: The study found a strong link between an increase in rats and rising temperatures, a consequence of climate change<\/a>. Cities that warmed more quickly had larger increases in rat sightings, the research found. This is in part because, with warmer winters, rats can spend more time eating and reproducing and less time hunkering down underground.<\/p>\n

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Scientists project<\/a> that urban areas will warm by between 3.4 and nearly 7.9 degrees Fahrenheit by the end of the century, depending on how much oil and gas we burn. Cities tend to be hotter than rural areas \u2014 because concrete and other human infrastructure absorb and re-emit more heat than vegetation \u2014 and warm faster<\/a>. That means that not only are current rat control methods failing, but the problem is likely to get much worse.<\/p>\n

It\u2019s a good thing, then, that there\u2019s an obvious solution. And better yet, it\u2019s simple.<\/p>\n

The cities where rat sightings are growing the fastest<\/strong><\/h2>\n

While rats are easily the most common urban mammal, cities don\u2019t actually know how many of them there are. They don\u2019t run a census for rats like they do for, say, squirrels<\/a>. So to figure out how their populations are changing, researchers rely instead on proxies, such as 311 complaints \u2014 when disgruntled tenants or parkgoers or diners report an infestation to city officials. Those complaints have been shown to correlate<\/a> with the abundance of rats, though they\u2019re imperfect approximations. Plenty of factors, beyond the sheer number of rats, influence whether or not someone complains, including their relationship with their landlord and trust in the city government.<\/p>\n

The new study relies on those public complaints, though it also uses inspection reports, which are created by city officials who inspect a property for rats, either following a complaint or as part of a proactive sweep. The authors identified 16 cities, most of which are in the US, that reported this data consistently for at least seven years.<\/p>\n

The figure below shows how rat sightings in those cities have changed. Cities with red bars show an increase in rat sightings; longer bars show greater increases. Blue bars, in contrast, indicate rat sightings have decreased. The takeaway is that DC, San Francisco, Toronto, and New York City have seen a surge in sightings over the last several years, whereas rat sightings in New Orleans and Tokyo have dropped.<\/p>\n

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The researchers also explored what might be driving those trends, and ultimately linked rat sightings with temperature, the degree of urbanization (i.e., a lack of green space), and human population density.<\/p>\n

None of this is particularly surprising. When it\u2019s cold, rats and other small mammals burrow underground to stay warm. \u201cThis is called vertical migration,\u201d said Michael Parsons, an urban ecologist and rat expert. \u201cThey just keep going deeper and deeper the colder it gets. As that’s occurring, they’re not mating.\u201d<\/p>\n

They\u2019re not eating as much, either, said Parsons, founder of the consulting firm Centre for Urban Ecological Solutions. Food doesn\u2019t smell as much when temperatures drop, making it harder for rats \u2014 who rely on their nose for foraging \u2014 to find their next meal. (As a cute but also gross aside, rats apparently<\/a> smell each other\u2019s breath to determine what foods they like.)<\/p>\n