Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - ALL RATS MUST DIE!!!

Episode Date: January 18, 2021

Humans and rats have lived in an uneasy relationship for millennia. Rats have spread diseases like the bubonic plague, destroyed grain harvests, and stolen our pizzas. In return, rats have given human...s…...pretty much nothing. As such, humans have waged a relentless war against rats which for the most part has gone nowhere. However, there are some fronts where we have had amazing success. Learn more about humanity’s war on rats on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Humans and rats have lived in an uneasy relationship for millennia. Rats have spread diseases like the bubonic plague, destroyed grain harvest, and stolen our pizzas. In return, rats have given humans pretty much nothing. As such, humans have waged a relentless war against rats, which for the most part has gone nowhere. However, there are some fronts where we have had some amazing success. Learn more about humanity's war on rats on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. What if your perceptions about the past were wrong? ThruLine is a podcast that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story that may have gone unnoticed.
Starting point is 00:00:52 It effectively turned day into night and how it shaped the world now. Time travel with us every week on the ThruLine podcast from NPR. This episode is sponsored by Skillshare. It's the new year, and that means New Year's resolutions. If you're like most people, you might be looking to lose weight or get in shape. Skillshare has tons of videos to help you improve yourself without leaving your home. They have dozens and dozens of workout, exercise, and fitness videos to let you get in shape without having to go to the gym. With Skillshare Premium, you can have unlimited access to everything for as low as 825 per month.
Starting point is 00:01:31 Go to everything-dash-everywhere.com slash Skillshare to get a free two-week trial of Skillshare Premium membership. The history of rats and humans goes back to the beginning of agriculture. The rats, which most humans are familiar with, are the black rat or the ship rat, which came from India, and the brown rat or the Norwegian rat, which, oddly enough, didn't come from Norway, but somewhere else in continental Europe. Prior to the rise of agriculture, there was nothing special about the rat human relationship. Rats were like other rodents that lived in the wild. There were opportunistic eaters and were preyed on by larger carnivorous mammals and birds.
Starting point is 00:02:09 With the rise of agriculture, rats found that. a brand new, almost unlimited food source, grain. Humans produced tons of grain, and all the rats had to do was hang around humans, and they could get almost unlimited food. Rats are omnivorous, which means they can eat almost anything. Grain, fruit, meat, insects, and other rats are all on the menu. Almost immediately, this caused problems for humans. Many early farmers had their entire crops wiped out due to infestations of rats.
Starting point is 00:02:39 It's widely believed that the rat's attraction to human sites, settlements was one of the major reasons for the domestication of cats. As rats came for our food, the cats came for the rats. But that's a topic for another episode. Even today, an estimated 1% of all cereal crops in the world are destroyed by rats, and as much as 5% in some developing countries. Rats were widely thought to be the transmission mechanism for the bubonic plague, which was behind the Black Death and the Plague of Justinian, and you can see my previous episode about that. As humans spread across the globe, rats came with them every step of the way. This was also true when humans started to go on long ocean voyages. Rats would board the ship where
Starting point is 00:03:19 they would survive by eating food stores and then would leave the ship once it arrived in a new port. And this gets to the subject of this episode. Ships spread rats all over the world. In the old world, rats were annoying and were pests, but they didn't overload the ecosystem. However, many of the islands that the rats wound up on had no defenses against them. They were nesting areas for numerous seabirds and had no natural predators. Because these islands were isolated and didn't have any natural predators, birds would set their nests right in the ground and in large numbers. These birds, and more importantly the bird eggs, were easy prey for rats. Rats have done more to devastate the population of seabirds than anything else in the world. One island in particular had been hit very
Starting point is 00:04:05 hard from rats. South Georgia Island. If you aren't familiar with South Georgia Island, I can tell you from first-hand experience that it is one of the most incredible places on earth. Located between South America and Africa, north of Antarctica, but everything is north of Antarctica, it's a British territory and one of the largest breeding grounds for penguins and seabirds in the world. Well, at least it was. In the early 20th century, Norwegian whalers and sealers set up bases on the island, and with them came rats. The rats, facing no natural predators, destroyed the native population of albatross, Skua, Terns, and Petrels. Most importantly, the two species of bird which were found nowhere else in the world, the South Georgia Pippet and the South Georgia Pintail, were threatened with extinction.
Starting point is 00:04:52 It had been estimated that by 2010, the seabird population on South Georgia was probably 10 million less than what it would have been if there were no rats on the island. In 2010, the British government announced their intent to eradicate rats on South Georgia. South Georgia Island isn't enormous, but it was going to be the single largest rat eradication program in the world. The hard part of getting rid of rats is that you have to get rid of all the rats. Killing 99% of the rats won't work. It has to be 100%.
Starting point is 00:05:24 Rats reproduce rapidly, really rapidly. A female rat can have six litters in a single year, and a rat can reach sexual maturity only nine weeks after being born. If you have two rats, absent any predators or food shortages, you can have a half a billion rats within three years. The good thing about South Georgia is that the center of the island is mostly covered in ice. The island is also surrounded by various peninsulas and fjords, which meant that the different parts of the island were separated from each other by ice.
Starting point is 00:05:57 And rats can't cross over ice. The plan was to cover the rat-infested parts of the island with a rodenticide called rhodophicum. The poison is an anticoagulant that causes the rats to bleed internally and die. The poison-laced rat pellets were methodically spread by helicopters, which carried bins of pellets that spread the pellets below them. They would fly a route that was plotted via GPS to make sure that they got every square inch of the island.
Starting point is 00:06:22 If they missed anything, a few rats might survive, and the entire project would be for naught. Now, if you're like me, you might be wondering if spreading all the poison around might not harm the birds. And the answer is, yes. But the impact on the birds wouldn't be nearly as bad as what it would do to the rats. And the impact would be short term. In the long term, the birds would thrive once the rats were gone,
Starting point is 00:06:46 and the poison in the rat pellets would decay over time. This technique had been tested on other islands, where the rats were eradicated and the birds came back. The first test was done in 2011. The next season, they laid traps to find evidence of rats, and found nothing. Phase two commenced in 2013 and phase three in 2015. In total, more than 300 tons of rat poison were spread over the island. You just can't declare victory when it comes to rats. They set traps and brought in rat sniffing dogs to the island in 2016 and 2017
Starting point is 00:07:18 to check to see if any rats had returned. In 2018, the South Georgia Heritage Trust announced that South Georgia Island was rat free. It was the largest successful rat eradication. It was the largest successful rat eradication program in history. There has already been a noticeable increase in the population of the South Georgia Pippet, which is the only songbird in the Antarctic and sub-Antarctic region. The sound of the pippets is now said to drowned out the sound of the seals. They've instituted protocols for the ships which visit the island to make sure that no rats ever return. Ships are fumigated and checked with rat sniffing dogs. Other islands around the world have looked to the success of the rat eradication on South Georgia and are looking to replicate.
Starting point is 00:07:59 the success themselves. Hopefully, this will be the start of removing the invasive rats which were brought to many of these islands by humans and the return of the native birds which live there. Executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is James Mackala. The associate producer is Thor Thompson. Today's five-star review comes from listener Sila Gray over on Apple Podcasts. They write, Fascinating Facts about little known but fascinating things. I love how this podcast shed light on little known but fascinating things around the world, all condensed into a small bite-sized package in each episode. Each episode makes me feel like my IQ is going up by five points
Starting point is 00:08:40 and leaves my brain craving for more. Well, thank you very much, Scylla. At five IQ points per show, eventually you should achieve galactic levels of intelligence and will be able to transcend time and space. When that happens, please remember us little people. Also remember that if you leave a five-star review, you too can have your review read on the show.

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