Rodents Rock: 20 Radical Facts About Rats

(Above: bred and trained bomb-and-mine-sniffing giant African rats)

When you think of rats, what comes to mind? The fabled giant rats of New York City sewers? The lovable (if improbable) chef of Ratatouille? There are actually many types of rats: kangaroo rats, Norway rats, cotton rats, pack rats, wood rats, greater stick-nest rats, roof rats, naked mole rats and other species like the terrifyingly huge Mallomys rat. Rats have been instrumental in helping researchers to develop medical cures, and despite the fact that they are not considered as cute and cuddly as hamsters and gerbils, rats are affectionate, intelligent, friendly creatures. Read on to learn all about the amazing animal that is the rat.

Rat 101

(Image via NYT)

Rats are omnivores (and not very picky ones). They have terrible vision, and they’re colorblind, so they rely on their fine sense of smell and whiskers for touch. They have some very talented teeth: rats can chew through wood, metal, even concrete (if uncured). They’re also highly social, enjoying play and cuddling with other rats. They develop deep bonds with their rat pack, and if a member of the group becomes sick they will care for it. A lonely rat is an unhealthy rat – it will quickly develop anxiety and depression.

Unusual Rat Facts

(Image via vatanappally)

Rats enjoy chocolate – unlike dogs, it won’t hurt them. Rats love games and are highly curious – as curious as cats. Rats adore snuggling up in your lap while you watch a movie or read a book. Rats don’t have thumbs or canine teeth – and while they can chow down on a Hershey bar, if they get close to cedar or pine oil they can become very ill. Rats will “date” a mate and get it on before you even know what’s happening; from meetup to hookup to breakup lasts two seconds. A rat can go longer than a camel without water and fall 15 meters without being injured. In American culture a rat is associated with dishonesty and cunning, but in other cultures, particularly Asian culture, rats are viewed with favorable characteristics like honesty, hard work, intelligence and good luck. They’re not considered dirty or undesirable at all. And actually, rats are very clean. They are even an important part of Eastern spirituality – the Year of the Rat is the first year of the Chinese zodiac.

Rats in History

(Images via dpchallenge and mindfully.org)

The rats of New York are infamous – foot-long rodents living in trees, attacking people, taking up residence in the rubble of 9/11, popping up out of toilets. And rats are associated with the spread of the Bubonic Plague in medieval Europe, a disaster that claimed 1/3 of the population. Yet rats also have changed the course of history for the better. Rats exposed the squalor of Chinatown in San Francisco; rats drove rent strikes in the 1960s. Their amazing memories, rapid learning ability, curiosity, hardiness and friendliness make them ideal for research and service to humans (Learn more about amazing rat stories). Rats can sniff out landmines and bombs and identify tuberculosis; they can be used in search and rescue. Unfortunately for rats, they’re also very tasty. Pets, medicine, helpers, and yes – dinner.

Top image: alase

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  • dawn
    March 7th, 2009 at 8:43 am

    You do not know rats very well. first of all, they can have chocolate, but in very small doses and not very often, the stimulants in it can make their hearts race.
    Second, rats were not responsible for the plague, fleas were.
    and just for the record, Ive had rats for 35 years, I have never been bit, let alone.. attacked! How is a rat going to attack? LOL its not as if they leap, the worse a wild rat could do is chew on your shoe. What human couldnt out run that??

  • Bobble
    August 11th, 2009 at 8:58 pm

    I know you’re probably not reading this dawn, but I thought I’d respond anyway, you’re a moron for not reading the post, it clearly states several times that rats CAN have chocolate, not that they can’t. It clearly states that rats are good pets and don’t bite, it’s extremely obvious you didn’t read the article. Another point, certain species of rats not domesticated breeds as your pets surely are, can leap, and they can attack if they feel threatened. There are well documented cases of rats eating babies which were left alone in Chicago tenements before the fire. Are you sure you’re not a rat yourself? I doubt you even have the intelligence to use your thumbs.

  • tina
    August 20th, 2009 at 2:38 am

    wow thats awesome

  • tedrwxtrwtx
    August 29th, 2009 at 12:53 am

    it sucks, it’s f%#*$@ shit
    this info is not f%#*$@ true it’s crap!
    not true,not true

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