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Black rat

The black rat (Rattus rattus), also known as the roof rat, ship rat, or house rat, is a common long-tailed rodent of the stereotypical rat genus Rattus, in the subfamily Murinae.[1] It likely originated in the Indian subcontinent, but is now found worldwide.[2]

Black rat
Temporal range: Holocene
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Rodentia
Family: Muridae
Genus: Rattus
Species:
R. rattus
Binomial name
Rattus rattus
Synonyms

Mus rattus Linnaeus, 1758

The black rat is black to light brown in colour with a lighter underside. It is a generalist omnivore and a serious pest to farmers because it feeds on a wide range of agricultural crops. It is sometimes kept as a pet. In parts of India, it is considered sacred and respected in the Karni Mata Temple in Deshnoke.

Taxonomy

Mus rattus was the scientific name proposed by Carl Linnaeus in 1758 for the black rat.[3]

Three subspecies were once recognized, but today are considered invalid and are now known to be actually color morphs:[citation needed]

  • Rattus rattus rattus – roof rat
  • Rattus rattus alexandrinus – Alexandrine rat
  • Rattus rattus frugivorus – fruit rat

Characteristics

 
 
Comparison of physique with a brown rat (Rattus norvegicus)

A typical adult black rat is 12.75 to 18.25 cm (5.0 to 7.2 in) long, not including a 15 to 22 cm (5.9 to 8.7 in) tail, and weighs 75 to 230 g (2.6 to 8.1 oz), depending on the subspecies.[4][5][6][7] Despite its name, the black rat exhibits several colour forms. It is usually black to light brown in colour with a lighter underside. In England during the 1920s, several variations were bred and shown alongside domesticated brown rats. This included an unusual green-tinted variety.[8] The black rat also has a scraggly coat of black fur, and is slightly smaller than the brown rat.

Origin

Black rat bone remains dating to the Norman period were discovered in Great Britain. The black rat occurred in prehistoric Europe and in the Levant during postglacial periods.[9] The black rat in the Mediterranean region differs genetically from its South Asian ancestor by having 38 instead of 42 chromosomes.[10] Its closest relative is the Asian house rat (R. tanezumi) from Southeast Asia. The two diverged about 120,000 years ago in southwest Asia. It is unclear how the rat made its way to Europe due to insufficient data, although a land route seems more likely based on the distribution of European haplogroup "A". The rat spread throughout Europe with the Roman conquest, but declined around the 6th century – possibly due to collapse of the Roman grain trade, climate cooling, or the Justinianic Plague. A genetically different rat population (still haplogroup A) replaced the Roman population in the medieval times in Europe.[11]

It is a resilient vector for many diseases because of its ability to hold so many infectious bacteria in its blood. It was formerly thought to have played a primary role in spreading bacteria contained in fleas on its body, such as the plague bacterium (Yersinia pestis) which is responsible for the Plague of Justinian and the Black Death.[12] However, recent studies have called this theory into question and instead posit humans themselves as the vector, as the movements of the epidemics and the black rat populations do not show historical or geographical correspondence.[13][14] A study published in 2015 indicates that other Asiatic rodents served as plague reservoirs, from which infections spread as far west as Europe via trade routes, both overland and maritime. Although the black rat was certainly a plague vector in European ports, the spread of the plague beyond areas colonized by rats suggests that the plague was also circulated by humans after reaching Europe.[15]

Diet

Black rats are considered omnivores and eat a wide range of foods, including seeds, fruit, stems, leaves, fungi, and a variety of invertebrates and vertebrates. They are generalists, and thus not very specific in their food preferences, which is indicated by their tendency to feed on any meal provided for cows, swine, chickens, cats, and dogs.[16] They are similar to the tree squirrel in their preference of fruits and nuts. They eat about 15 grams (0.53 oz) per day and drink about 15 millilitres (0.53 imp fl oz; 0.51 US fl oz) per day.[17] Their diet is high in water content.[16] They are a threat to many natural habitats because they feed on birds and insects. They are also a threat to many farmers, since they feed on a variety of agricultural-based crops, such as cereals, sugar cane, coconuts, cocoa, oranges, and coffee beans.[18]

Distribution and habitat

The black rat originated in India and Southeast Asia, and spread to the Near East and Egypt, and then throughout the Roman Empire, reaching Great Britain as early as the 1st century AD.[19] Europeans subsequently spread it throughout the world. The black rat is again largely confined to warmer areas, having been supplanted by the brown rat (Rattus norvegicus) in cooler regions and urban areas. In addition to the brown rat being larger and more aggressive, the change from wooden structures and thatched roofs to bricked and tiled buildings favored the burrowing brown rats over the arboreal black rats. In addition, brown rats eat a wider variety of foods, and are more resistant to weather extremes.[20]

Black rat populations can increase exponentially under certain circumstances, perhaps having to do with the timing of the fruiting of the bamboo plant, and cause devastation to the plantings of subsistence farmers; this phenomenon is known as mautam in parts of India.[21]

Black rats are thought to have arrived in Australia with the First Fleet, and subsequently spread to many coastal regions in the country.[22]

Black rats adapt to a wide range of habitats. In urban areas they are found around warehouses, residential buildings, and other human settlements. They are also found in agricultural areas, such as in barns and crop fields. In urban areas, they prefer to live in dry upper levels of buildings, so they are commonly found in wall cavities and false ceilings. In the wild, black rats live in cliffs, rocks, the ground, and trees.[18] They are great climbers and prefer to live in palms and trees, such as pine trees. Their nests are typically spherical and made of shredded material, including sticks, leaves, other vegetation, and cloth. In the absence of palms or trees, they can burrow into the ground.[17] Black rats are also found around fences, ponds, riverbanks, streams, and reservoirs.[16]

Behaviour and ecology

It is thought that male and female rats have similarly sized home ranges during the winter, but male rats increase the size of their home range during the breeding season. Along with differing between rats of different sex, home range also differs depending on the type of forest in which the black rat inhabits. For example, home ranges in the southern beech forests of the South Island, New Zealand appear to be much larger than the non-beech forests of the North Island. Due to the limited number of rats that are studied in home range studies, the estimated sizes of rat home ranges in different rat demographic groups are inconclusive.

Nesting behaviour

Through the usage of tracking devices such as radio transmitters, rats have been found to occupy dens located in trees, as well as on the ground. In Puketi Forest in the Northland Region of New Zealand, rats have been found to form dens together. Rats appear to den and forage in separate areas in their home range depending on the availability of food resources.[23] Research shows that, in New South Wales, the black rat prefers to inhabit lower leaf litter of forest habitat. There is also an apparent correlation between the canopy height and logs and the presence of black rats. This correlation may be a result of the distribution of the abundance of prey as well as available refuges for rats to avoid predators. As found in North Head, New South Wales, there is positive correlation between rat abundance, leaf litter cover, canopy height, and litter depth. All other habitat variables showed little to no correlation.[24] While this species' relative, the brown (Norway) rat prefers to nest near the ground of a building the black rat will prefer the upper floors and roof. Because of this habit they have been given the common name roof rat.

Foraging behaviour

The black rat displays flexibility in its foraging behaviour. It is a predatory species and adapts to different micro-habitats. It often meets and forages together in close proximity within and between sexes.[23] It tends to forage after sunset. If the food cannot be eaten quickly, it searches for a place to carry and hoard to eat at a later time.[16] Although it eats a broad range of foods, it is a highly selective feeder; only a restricted selection of the foods is dominating.[25] When offered a wide diversity of foods, it eats only a small sample of each. This allows it to monitor the quality of foods that are present year round, such as leaves, as well as seasonal foods, such as herbs and insects. This method of operating on a set of foraging standards ultimately determines the final composition of its meals. Also, by sampling the available food in an area, it maintains a dynamic food supply, balance its nutrient intake, and avoids intoxication by secondary compounds.[25]

Diseases

Black rats (or their ectoparasites[26]) can carry a number of pathogens,[27] of which bubonic plague (via the Oriental rat flea), typhus, Weil's disease, toxoplasmosis and trichinosis are the best known. It has been hypothesized that the displacement of black rats by brown rats led to the decline of the Black Death.[28][29] This theory has, however, been deprecated, as the dates of these displacements do not match the increases and decreases in plague outbreaks.[30][31][32]

Rats serve as outstanding vectors for transmittance of diseases because they can carry bacteria and viruses in their systems. A number of bacterial diseases are common to rats, and these include Streptococcus pneumoniae, Corynebacterium kutsheri, Bacillus piliformis, Pasteurella pneumotropica, and Streptobacillus moniliformis, to name a few. All of these bacteria are disease causing agents in humans. In some cases, these diseases are incurable.[33]

Predators

The black rat is prey to cats and owls in domestic settings. In less urban settings, rats are preyed on by weasels, foxes, and coyotes. These predators have little effect on the control of the black rat population because black rats are agile and fast climbers. In addition to agility, the black rat also uses its keen sense of hearing to detect danger and quickly evade mammalian and avian predators.[16]

As an invasive species

Damage caused

After Rattus rattus was introduced into the northern islands of New Zealand, they fed on the seedlings, adversely affecting the ecology of the islands. Even after eradication of R. rattus, the negative effects may take decades to reverse. When consuming these seabirds and seabird eggs, these rats reduce the pH of the soil. This harms plant species by reducing nutrient availability in soil, thus decreasing the probability of seed germination. For example, research conducted by Hoffman et al. indicates a large impact on 16 indigenous plant species directly preyed on by R. rattus. These plants displayed a negative correlation in germination and growth in the presence of black rats.[34] Rats prefer to forage in forest habitats. In the Ogasawara islands, they prey on the indigenous snails and seedlings. Snails that inhabit the leaf litter of these islands showed a significant decline in population on the introduction of Rattus rattus. The black rat shows a preference for snails with larger shells (greater than 10 mm), and this led to a great decline in the population of snails with larger shells. A lack of prey refuges makes it more difficult for the snail to avoid the rat.[35]

Complex pest

The black rat is a complex pest, defined as one that influences the environment in both harmful and beneficial ways. In many cases, after the black rat is introduced into a new area, the population size of some native species declines or goes extinct. This is because the black rat is a good generalist with a wide dietary niche and a preference for complex habitats; this causes strong competition for resources among small animals. This has led to the black rat completely displacing many native species in Madagascar, the Galapagos, and the Florida Keys. In a study by Stokes et al., habitats suitable for the native bush rat, Rattus fuscipes, of Australia are often invaded by the black rat and are eventually occupied by only the black rat. When the abundances of these two rat species were compared in different micro-habitats, both were found to be affected by micro-habitat disturbances, but the black rat was most abundant in areas of high disturbance; this indicates it has a better dispersal ability.[36]

Despite the black rat's tendency to displace native species, it can also aid in increasing species population numbers and maintaining species diversity. The bush rat, a common vector for spore dispersal of truffles, has been extirpated from many micro-habitats of Australia. In the absence of a vector, the diversity of truffle species would be expected to decline. In a study in New South Wales, Australia it was found that, although the bush rat consumes a diversity of truffle species, the black rat consumes as much of the diverse fungi as the natives and is an effective vector for spore dispersal. Since the black rat now occupies many of the micro-habitats that were previously inhabited by the bush rat, the black rat plays an important ecological role in the dispersal of fungal spores. By eradicating the black rat populations in Australia, the diversity of fungi would decline, potentially doing more harm than good.[36]

Control methods

Large-scale rat control programs have been taken to maintain a steady level of the invasive predators in order to conserve the native species in New Zealand such as kokako and mohua.[37] Pesticides, such as pindone and 1080 (sodium fluoroacetate), are commonly distributed via aerial spray by helicopter as a method of mass control on islands infested with invasive rat populations. Bait, such as brodifacoum, is also used along with coloured dyes (used to deter birds from eating the baits) in order to kill and identify rats for experimental and tracking purposes. Another method to track rats is the use of wired cage traps, which are used along with bait, such as rolled oats and peanut butter, to tag and track rats to determine population sizes through methods like mark-recapture and radio-tracking.[23] Tracking tunnels (coreflute tunnels containing an inked card) are also commonly used monitoring devices, as are chew-cards containing peanut butter.[38] Poison control methods are effective in reducing rat populations to nonthreatening sizes, but rat populations often rebound to normal size within months. Besides their highly adaptive foraging behavior and fast reproduction, the exact mechanisms for their rebound is unclear and are still being studied.[39]

In 2010, the Sociedad Ornitológica Puertorriqueña (Puerto Rican Bird Society) and the Ponce Yacht and Fishing Club launched a campaign to eradicate the black rat from the Isla Ratones (Mice Island) and Isla Cardona (Cardona Island) islands off the municipality of Ponce, Puerto Rico.[40]

Decline in population

Rattus rattus populations were common in Great Britain, but began to decline after the introduction of the brown rat in the 18th century. R. rattus populations remained common in seaports and major cities until the late 19th century, but have been decreased due to rodent control and sanitation measures. The Shiant Islands in the Outer Hebrides in Scotland are often cited as the last remaining wild population of R. rattus left in Britain but evidence demonstrates that populations survive on other islands (e.g. Inchcolm) and in localised areas of the British mainland.[41][42] Recent National Biodiversity Network data show populations around the U.K., particularly in ports and port towns.[43]

As of winter 2015 the Shiant Isles Recovery Project (a joint initiative between RSPB and Scottish Natural Heritage) is underway to eradicate Rattus rattus populations on the islands.[41]

See also

References

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Further reading

External links

  • at ARKive

black, rattus, rattus, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, black, rattus, rattus, also, known, roof, ship, house, common, long, tailed, rodent, stereotypical, genus, rattus, subfamily, murinae, likely, originated, indian, subcontinent, found, worldwi. Rattus rattus redirects here For other uses see Black rat disambiguation The black rat Rattus rattus also known as the roof rat ship rat or house rat is a common long tailed rodent of the stereotypical rat genus Rattus in the subfamily Murinae 1 It likely originated in the Indian subcontinent but is now found worldwide 2 Black ratTemporal range HoloceneConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder RodentiaFamily MuridaeGenus RattusSpecies R rattusBinomial nameRattus rattus Linnaeus 1758 SynonymsMus rattus Linnaeus 1758The black rat is black to light brown in colour with a lighter underside It is a generalist omnivore and a serious pest to farmers because it feeds on a wide range of agricultural crops It is sometimes kept as a pet In parts of India it is considered sacred and respected in the Karni Mata Temple in Deshnoke Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Characteristics 3 Origin 4 Diet 5 Distribution and habitat 6 Behaviour and ecology 6 1 Nesting behaviour 6 2 Foraging behaviour 6 3 Diseases 6 4 Predators 7 As an invasive species 7 1 Damage caused 7 2 Complex pest 7 3 Control methods 8 Decline in population 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksTaxonomy EditMus rattus was the scientific name proposed by Carl Linnaeus in 1758 for the black rat 3 Three subspecies were once recognized but today are considered invalid and are now known to be actually color morphs citation needed Rattus rattus rattus roof rat Rattus rattus alexandrinus Alexandrine rat Rattus rattus frugivorus fruit ratCharacteristics Edit Comparison of physique with a brown rat Rattus norvegicus Museum of Osteology A typical adult black rat is 12 75 to 18 25 cm 5 0 to 7 2 in long not including a 15 to 22 cm 5 9 to 8 7 in tail and weighs 75 to 230 g 2 6 to 8 1 oz depending on the subspecies 4 5 6 7 Despite its name the black rat exhibits several colour forms It is usually black to light brown in colour with a lighter underside In England during the 1920s several variations were bred and shown alongside domesticated brown rats This included an unusual green tinted variety 8 The black rat also has a scraggly coat of black fur and is slightly smaller than the brown rat Origin EditBlack rat bone remains dating to the Norman period were discovered in Great Britain The black rat occurred in prehistoric Europe and in the Levant during postglacial periods 9 The black rat in the Mediterranean region differs genetically from its South Asian ancestor by having 38 instead of 42 chromosomes 10 Its closest relative is the Asian house rat R tanezumi from Southeast Asia The two diverged about 120 000 years ago in southwest Asia It is unclear how the rat made its way to Europe due to insufficient data although a land route seems more likely based on the distribution of European haplogroup A The rat spread throughout Europe with the Roman conquest but declined around the 6th century possibly due to collapse of the Roman grain trade climate cooling or the Justinianic Plague A genetically different rat population still haplogroup A replaced the Roman population in the medieval times in Europe 11 It is a resilient vector for many diseases because of its ability to hold so many infectious bacteria in its blood It was formerly thought to have played a primary role in spreading bacteria contained in fleas on its body such as the plague bacterium Yersinia pestis which is responsible for the Plague of Justinian and the Black Death 12 However recent studies have called this theory into question and instead posit humans themselves as the vector as the movements of the epidemics and the black rat populations do not show historical or geographical correspondence 13 14 A study published in 2015 indicates that other Asiatic rodents served as plague reservoirs from which infections spread as far west as Europe via trade routes both overland and maritime Although the black rat was certainly a plague vector in European ports the spread of the plague beyond areas colonized by rats suggests that the plague was also circulated by humans after reaching Europe 15 Diet EditBlack rats are considered omnivores and eat a wide range of foods including seeds fruit stems leaves fungi and a variety of invertebrates and vertebrates They are generalists and thus not very specific in their food preferences which is indicated by their tendency to feed on any meal provided for cows swine chickens cats and dogs 16 They are similar to the tree squirrel in their preference of fruits and nuts They eat about 15 grams 0 53 oz per day and drink about 15 millilitres 0 53 imp fl oz 0 51 US fl oz per day 17 Their diet is high in water content 16 They are a threat to many natural habitats because they feed on birds and insects They are also a threat to many farmers since they feed on a variety of agricultural based crops such as cereals sugar cane coconuts cocoa oranges and coffee beans 18 Distribution and habitat EditThe black rat originated in India and Southeast Asia and spread to the Near East and Egypt and then throughout the Roman Empire reaching Great Britain as early as the 1st century AD 19 Europeans subsequently spread it throughout the world The black rat is again largely confined to warmer areas having been supplanted by the brown rat Rattus norvegicus in cooler regions and urban areas In addition to the brown rat being larger and more aggressive the change from wooden structures and thatched roofs to bricked and tiled buildings favored the burrowing brown rats over the arboreal black rats In addition brown rats eat a wider variety of foods and are more resistant to weather extremes 20 Black rat populations can increase exponentially under certain circumstances perhaps having to do with the timing of the fruiting of the bamboo plant and cause devastation to the plantings of subsistence farmers this phenomenon is known as mautam in parts of India 21 Black rats are thought to have arrived in Australia with the First Fleet and subsequently spread to many coastal regions in the country 22 Black rats adapt to a wide range of habitats In urban areas they are found around warehouses residential buildings and other human settlements They are also found in agricultural areas such as in barns and crop fields In urban areas they prefer to live in dry upper levels of buildings so they are commonly found in wall cavities and false ceilings In the wild black rats live in cliffs rocks the ground and trees 18 They are great climbers and prefer to live in palms and trees such as pine trees Their nests are typically spherical and made of shredded material including sticks leaves other vegetation and cloth In the absence of palms or trees they can burrow into the ground 17 Black rats are also found around fences ponds riverbanks streams and reservoirs 16 Behaviour and ecology EditIt is thought that male and female rats have similarly sized home ranges during the winter but male rats increase the size of their home range during the breeding season Along with differing between rats of different sex home range also differs depending on the type of forest in which the black rat inhabits For example home ranges in the southern beech forests of the South Island New Zealand appear to be much larger than the non beech forests of the North Island Due to the limited number of rats that are studied in home range studies the estimated sizes of rat home ranges in different rat demographic groups are inconclusive Nesting behaviour Edit Through the usage of tracking devices such as radio transmitters rats have been found to occupy dens located in trees as well as on the ground In Puketi Forest in the Northland Region of New Zealand rats have been found to form dens together Rats appear to den and forage in separate areas in their home range depending on the availability of food resources 23 Research shows that in New South Wales the black rat prefers to inhabit lower leaf litter of forest habitat There is also an apparent correlation between the canopy height and logs and the presence of black rats This correlation may be a result of the distribution of the abundance of prey as well as available refuges for rats to avoid predators As found in North Head New South Wales there is positive correlation between rat abundance leaf litter cover canopy height and litter depth All other habitat variables showed little to no correlation 24 While this species relative the brown Norway rat prefers to nest near the ground of a building the black rat will prefer the upper floors and roof Because of this habit they have been given the common name roof rat Foraging behaviour Edit The black rat displays flexibility in its foraging behaviour It is a predatory species and adapts to different micro habitats It often meets and forages together in close proximity within and between sexes 23 It tends to forage after sunset If the food cannot be eaten quickly it searches for a place to carry and hoard to eat at a later time 16 Although it eats a broad range of foods it is a highly selective feeder only a restricted selection of the foods is dominating 25 When offered a wide diversity of foods it eats only a small sample of each This allows it to monitor the quality of foods that are present year round such as leaves as well as seasonal foods such as herbs and insects This method of operating on a set of foraging standards ultimately determines the final composition of its meals Also by sampling the available food in an area it maintains a dynamic food supply balance its nutrient intake and avoids intoxication by secondary compounds 25 Diseases Edit Black rats or their ectoparasites 26 can carry a number of pathogens 27 of which bubonic plague via the Oriental rat flea typhus Weil s disease toxoplasmosis and trichinosis are the best known It has been hypothesized that the displacement of black rats by brown rats led to the decline of the Black Death 28 29 This theory has however been deprecated as the dates of these displacements do not match the increases and decreases in plague outbreaks 30 31 32 Rats serve as outstanding vectors for transmittance of diseases because they can carry bacteria and viruses in their systems A number of bacterial diseases are common to rats and these include Streptococcus pneumoniae Corynebacterium kutsheri Bacillus piliformis Pasteurella pneumotropica and Streptobacillus moniliformis to name a few All of these bacteria are disease causing agents in humans In some cases these diseases are incurable 33 Predators Edit The black rat is prey to cats and owls in domestic settings In less urban settings rats are preyed on by weasels foxes and coyotes These predators have little effect on the control of the black rat population because black rats are agile and fast climbers In addition to agility the black rat also uses its keen sense of hearing to detect danger and quickly evade mammalian and avian predators 16 As an invasive species EditDamage caused Edit After Rattus rattus was introduced into the northern islands of New Zealand they fed on the seedlings adversely affecting the ecology of the islands Even after eradication of R rattus the negative effects may take decades to reverse When consuming these seabirds and seabird eggs these rats reduce the pH of the soil This harms plant species by reducing nutrient availability in soil thus decreasing the probability of seed germination For example research conducted by Hoffman et al indicates a large impact on 16 indigenous plant species directly preyed on by R rattus These plants displayed a negative correlation in germination and growth in the presence of black rats 34 Rats prefer to forage in forest habitats In the Ogasawara islands they prey on the indigenous snails and seedlings Snails that inhabit the leaf litter of these islands showed a significant decline in population on the introduction of Rattus rattus The black rat shows a preference for snails with larger shells greater than 10 mm and this led to a great decline in the population of snails with larger shells A lack of prey refuges makes it more difficult for the snail to avoid the rat 35 Complex pest Edit The black rat is a complex pest defined as one that influences the environment in both harmful and beneficial ways In many cases after the black rat is introduced into a new area the population size of some native species declines or goes extinct This is because the black rat is a good generalist with a wide dietary niche and a preference for complex habitats this causes strong competition for resources among small animals This has led to the black rat completely displacing many native species in Madagascar the Galapagos and the Florida Keys In a study by Stokes et al habitats suitable for the native bush rat Rattus fuscipes of Australia are often invaded by the black rat and are eventually occupied by only the black rat When the abundances of these two rat species were compared in different micro habitats both were found to be affected by micro habitat disturbances but the black rat was most abundant in areas of high disturbance this indicates it has a better dispersal ability 36 Despite the black rat s tendency to displace native species it can also aid in increasing species population numbers and maintaining species diversity The bush rat a common vector for spore dispersal of truffles has been extirpated from many micro habitats of Australia In the absence of a vector the diversity of truffle species would be expected to decline In a study in New South Wales Australia it was found that although the bush rat consumes a diversity of truffle species the black rat consumes as much of the diverse fungi as the natives and is an effective vector for spore dispersal Since the black rat now occupies many of the micro habitats that were previously inhabited by the bush rat the black rat plays an important ecological role in the dispersal of fungal spores By eradicating the black rat populations in Australia the diversity of fungi would decline potentially doing more harm than good 36 Control methods Edit Large scale rat control programs have been taken to maintain a steady level of the invasive predators in order to conserve the native species in New Zealand such as kokako and mohua 37 Pesticides such as pindone and 1080 sodium fluoroacetate are commonly distributed via aerial spray by helicopter as a method of mass control on islands infested with invasive rat populations Bait such as brodifacoum is also used along with coloured dyes used to deter birds from eating the baits in order to kill and identify rats for experimental and tracking purposes Another method to track rats is the use of wired cage traps which are used along with bait such as rolled oats and peanut butter to tag and track rats to determine population sizes through methods like mark recapture and radio tracking 23 Tracking tunnels coreflute tunnels containing an inked card are also commonly used monitoring devices as are chew cards containing peanut butter 38 Poison control methods are effective in reducing rat populations to nonthreatening sizes but rat populations often rebound to normal size within months Besides their highly adaptive foraging behavior and fast reproduction the exact mechanisms for their rebound is unclear and are still being studied 39 In 2010 the Sociedad Ornitologica Puertorriquena Puerto Rican Bird Society and the Ponce Yacht and Fishing Club launched a campaign to eradicate the black rat from the Isla Ratones Mice Island and Isla Cardona Cardona Island islands off the municipality of Ponce Puerto Rico 40 Decline in population EditRattus rattus populations were common in Great Britain but began to decline after the introduction of the brown rat in the 18th century R rattus populations remained common in seaports and major cities until the late 19th century but have been decreased due to rodent control and sanitation measures The Shiant Islands in the Outer Hebrides in Scotland are often cited as the last remaining wild population of R rattus left in Britain but evidence demonstrates that populations survive on other islands e g Inchcolm and in localised areas of the British mainland 41 42 Recent National Biodiversity Network data show populations around the U K particularly in ports and port towns 43 As of winter 2015 the Shiant Isles Recovery Project a joint initiative between RSPB and Scottish Natural Heritage is underway to eradicate Rattus rattus populations on the islands 41 See also EditKarni Mata Temple Deshnoke Rajasthan India Polynesian rat Urban plagueReferences Edit a b Krystufek B Palomo L Hutterer R Mitsainas G Yigit N 2021 Rattus rattus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2021 e T19360A192565917 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2021 1 RLTS T19360A192565917 en Retrieved 19 November 2021 Baig M Khan S Eager H Atkulwar A amp Searle J B 2019 Phylogeography of the black rat Rattus rattus in India and the implications for its dispersal history in Eurasia Biological Invasions 21 2 417 433 doi 10 1007 s10530 018 1830 0 S2CID 67790305 Linnaeus C 1758 Mus rattus Caroli Linnaei Systema naturae per regna tria naturae secundum classes ordines genera species cum characteribus differentiis synonymis locis Tomus I in Latin Decima reformata ed Holmiae Laurentius Salvius p 61 Black rat House Rat Roof Rat Ship Rat Rattus rattus WAZA org Archived from the original on 19 October 2016 Retrieved 19 October 2016 Gillespie H 2004 Rattus rattus house rat Animal Diversity Web Schwartz Charles Walsh and Schwartz Elizabeth Reeder 2001 The Wild Mammals of Missouri University of Missouri Press ISBN 978 0 8262 1359 4 p 250 Engels D W 1999 Rats Classical Cats The Rise and Fall of the Sacred Cat London and New York Routledge pp 1 17 ISBN 978 0 415 21251 9 Alderton D 1996 Rodents of the World Diane Publishing Company ISBN 0 8160 3229 7 Rackham J 1979 Rattus rattus The introduction of the black rat into Britain Antiquity 53 208 112 120 doi 10 1017 s0003598x00042319 PMID 11620121 S2CID 46387899 Yosida TosihideH Tsuchiya Kimiyuki Moriwaki Kazuo 1971 Karyotypic differences of black rats Rattus rattus collected in various localities of East and Southeast Asia and Oceania Chromosoma 33 3 252 267 doi 10 1007 BF00284943 PMID 5088494 S2CID 12454478 Note this source considersR tanezumia subspecies ofR rattus Yu He Jamieson Alexandra Hulme Beaman Ardern Conroy Chris J Knight Becky Speller Camilla Al Jarah Hiba Eager Heidi Trinks Alexandra Adikari Gamini Baron Henriette Bohlendorf Arslan Beate Bohingamuwa Wijerathne Crowther Alison Cucchi Thomas Esser Kinie Fleisher Jeffrey Gidney Louisa Gladilina Elena Gol din Pavel Goodman Steven M Hamilton Dyer Sheila Helm Richard Hillman Jesse C Kallala Nabil Kivikero Hanna Kovacs Zsofia E Kunst Gunther Karl Kysely Rene Linderholm Anna Maraoui Telmini Boutheina Markovic Nemanja Morales Muniz Arturo Nabais Mariana O Connor Terry Oueslati Tarek Quintana Morales Erendira M Pasda Kerstin Perera Jude Perera Nimal Radbauer Silvia Ramon Joan Rannamae Eve Sanmarti Grego Joan Treasure Edward Valenzuela Lamas Silvia van der Jagt Inge Van Neer Wim Vigne Jean Denis Walker Thomas Wynne Jones Stephanie Zeiler Jorn Dobney Keith Boivin Nicole Searle Jeremy B Krause Kyora Ben Krause Johannes Larson Greger Orton David 3 May 2022 Palaeogenomic analysis of black rat Rattus rattus reveals multiple European introductions associated with human economic history Nature Communications 13 1 2399 Bibcode 2022NatCo 13 2399Y doi 10 1038 s41467 022 30009 z PMC 9064997 PMID 35504912 McCormick M 2003 Rats Communications and Plague Toward an Ecological History PDF Journal of Interdisciplinary History 34 1 1 25 doi 10 1162 002219503322645439 S2CID 128567627 url https www history com news rats didnt spread the black death it was humans Black Death spread by humans not rats BBC News 15 January 2018 Retrieved 6 March 2023 Schmid B V Buntgen U Easterday W R Ginzler C Walloe L Bramanti B Stenseth N C 2015 Climate driven introduction of the Black Death and successive plague reintroductions into Europe Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 112 10 3020 3025 Bibcode 2015PNAS 112 3020S doi 10 1073 pnas 1412887112 PMC 4364181 PMID 25713390 a b c d e Marsh Rex E 1994 Roof Rats Internet Center for Wildlife Damage Management Prevention and Control of Wildlife Damage Archived from the original on 21 May 2011 Retrieved 22 April 2011 a b Bennet Stuart M The Black Rat Rattus Rattus The Pied Piper Retrieved 22 April 2011 a b Rattus rattus Roof rat Wildlife Information Network Retrieved 22 April 2011 permanent dead link Donald W Engels 1999 Classical Cats The Rise and Fall of the Sacred Cat Routledge p 111 ISBN 978 0 415 21251 9 Teisha Rowland 4 December 2009 Ancient Origins of Pet Rats Santa Barbara Independent Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Nova Rat Attack Nova 7 April 2010 PBS Evans Ondine 1 April 2010 Animal Species Black Rat Australian Museum website Sydney Australia Australian Museum Retrieved 31 December 2010 a b c Dowding J E amp Murphy E C 1994 Ecology of Ship Rats Rattus rattus in a Kauri Agathis australis Forest in Northland New Zealand PDF New Zealand Journal of Ecology 18 1 19 28 Cox M P G Dickman C R amp Cox W G 2000 Use of habitat by the black rat Rattus rattus at North Head New South Wales an observational and experimental study Austral Ecology 25 4 375 385 doi 10 1046 j 1442 9993 2000 01050 x a b Clark D A 1982 Foraging behavior of vertebrate omnivore Rattus rattus Meal structure sampling and diet breadth Ecology 63 3 763 772 doi 10 2307 1936797 JSTOR 1936797 Hafidzi M N Zakry F A A amp Saadiah A 2007 Ectoparasites of Rattus sp from Petaling Jaya Selangor Malaysia Pertanika Journal of Tropical Agricultural Science 30 1 11 16 Meerburg B G Singleton G R Kijlstra A 2009 Rodent borne diseases and their risks for public health Crit Rev Microbiology 35 3 221 270 doi 10 1080 10408410902989837 PMID 19548807 S2CID 205694138 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Last John M Black Death Encyclopedia of Public Health eNotes website Retrieved 31 December 2010 Barnes Ethne 2007 Diseases and Human Evolution University of New Mexico Press ISBN 978 0 8263 3066 6 p 247 Bollet Alfred J 2004 Plagues amp Poxes The Impact of Human History on Epidemic Disease Demos Medical Publishing 2004 ISBN 978 1 888799 79 8 p 23 Carrick Tracy Hamler Carrick Nancy and Finsen Lawrence 1997 The Persuasive Pen An Integrated Approach to Reasoning and Writing Jones and Bartlett Learning 1997 ISBN 978 0 7637 0234 2 p 162 Hays J N 2005 Epidemics and Pandemics Their Impacts on Human History ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 85109 658 9 p 64 Boschert Ken 27 March 1991 Rat Bacterial Diseases Net Vet and the Electronic Zoo Archived from the original on 18 October 1996 Retrieved 22 April 2011 Grant Hoffman MN Mulder CP Belingham PJ 2009 Invasive Rats Alter Woody Seedling Composition on Seabird dominated Islands in New Zealand Oecologia 163 2 449 60 doi 10 1007 s00442 009 1523 6 ISSN 1442 9993 PMID 20033216 S2CID 25286223 Chiba S 2010 Invasive Rats Alter Assemblage Characteristics of Land Snails in the Ogasawara Islands Biological Conservation 143 6 1558 63 doi 10 1016 j biocon 2010 03 040 a b Vernes K Mcgrath K 2009 Are Introduced Black Rats Rattus rattus a Functional Replacement for Mycophagous Native Rodents in Fragmented Forests Fungal Ecology 2 3 145 48 doi 10 1016 j funeco 2009 03 001 Pryde M Dilks P Fraser Ian 2005 The home range of ship rats Rattus rattus in beech forest in the Eglinton Valley Fiordland New Zealand a pilot study New Zealand Journal of Zoology 32 3 139 42 doi 10 1080 03014223 2005 9518406 S2CID 84513492 Jackson Michael Hartley Stephen Linklater Wayne 1 June 2016 Better food based baits and lures for invasive rats Rattus spp and the brushtail possum Trichosurus vulpecula a bioassay on wild free ranging animals Journal of Pest Science 89 2 479 488 doi 10 1007 s10340 015 0693 8 ISSN 1612 4766 S2CID 13095387 Innes J Warburton B Williams D et al 1995 Large Scale Poisoning of Ship Rats Rattus rattus in Indigenous Forests of the North Island New Zealand PDF New Zealand Journal of Ecology 19 1 5 17 Archived from the original PDF on 27 September 2011 Retrieved 22 April 2011 Wege David 4 August 2010 Restauran habitat del lagartijo del seco Anolis cooki en la Isla de Cardona y Cayo Ratones Archived 14 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine birdlife org a b The RSPB Shiant Isles Seabird Recovery Project www rspb org uk Retrieved 11 August 2016 Revealed Historic Scottish island home to black rats 31 December 2018 NBN Gateway Taxon data nbn org uk Retrieved 11 August 2016 Further reading EditList of books and articles about ratsExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rattus rattus Photos and video at ARKive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Black rat amp oldid 1146851665, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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