Somerville has launched the latest salvo in humanity's ongoing battle with rattus: Small environmentally friendly death chambers that can sense the presence of a rat and then electrocute it.
When a rodent enters a SMART Box, sensors detect movement and body heat and activate a “catch” function, immediately killing the rodent with an electrical current. The rodent is deposited into a closed container, then the trap automatically resets. SMART Boxes monitor and record rodent activity 24/7 and alert Modern Pest when activity is detected. SMART Boxes do not use poisons and are securely locked, so they don’t pose risks to people, other animals, or the environment.
The city and Modern Pest Services deployed an initial batch of 50 of the boxes to Davis Square, Gilman Street, Lexington Street and Macarthur Street, based in part on rat complaints to the city 311 system and Inspectional Services violations, in part because the four areas represent four different types of terrain on which to try them out: business, residential, open space and next to a construction/transit area.
Mayor Katjana Ballantyne said Somerville is only the second city in the country - after Portland, ME - to roll out rat electrodeath boxes.
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Comments
That's a really great idea. I
By anon
Wed, 03/02/2022 - 12:54pm
That's a really great idea. I hope this product puts an end to the awful "bait stations" everyone uses around here, which are actually full of neurotoxin poison which kills birds of prey and pets. The other alternative is snap traps, but that requires a lot of effort to empty and reset them.
Most use blood thinners
By robo
Wed, 03/02/2022 - 2:07pm
And the rats internally bleed to death. Still, definitely not good for our birds.
Rat poison is a huge issue
By SwirlyGrrl
Wed, 03/02/2022 - 3:43pm
The problem is that it kills off the predators of rats who see a sick rat and think "easy lunch".
Then, with the predators gone, well, more rats!
Warfarin is the trade name for coumadin for a reason - coumadin is vastly purified rat poison, aka WARFAReonvermIN.
"Trade name"
By perruptor
Thu, 03/03/2022 - 7:26am
If you're talking about brand names, Wiki says you've got it backwards. Warfarin is the generic name; Coumadin is the brand used as a blood thinner in humans. Fortunately, there are now a bunch of better drugs for that purpose.
Not necessarily better
By SwirlyGrrl
Thu, 03/03/2022 - 7:34pm
It depends on why you are taking blood thinners. If you have atrial fibrillation, then yes, there are now better drugs. If you have a prosthetic valve, warfarin is still the only long-term choice as the trials were halted early because risks were so bad with the new drugs.
And, yes, I did get it backwards. Good catch. Thanks. Still interesting how the name of the drug derives from its original use though.
Stop the growth of new
By Jimmy Somervill...
Wed, 03/02/2022 - 2:36pm
Stop the growth of new restaurants in the neighborhood and your problem will be solved.
Some neighborhoods don't have restaurants
By SwirlyGrrl
Wed, 03/02/2022 - 3:48pm
They still have a rat problem because Boston area cities refuse to take a clue from many other global cities that centralize garbage disposal into neighborhood hubs.
When you make rodent proof disposal available 24/7, you reduce the available food supply and the rat population responds.
Have I seen this?
By Gary C
Wed, 03/02/2022 - 4:05pm
Tell me more about centralized garbage disposal into neighborhood hubs.
Earlier on UHub?
By SwirlyGrrl
Wed, 03/02/2022 - 4:26pm
There are some pretty cool systems in Europe.
Some are relatively low-tech like Barcelona, that just has these bins in central areas in each neighborhood where people will drop a bag or do their recycling while taking a walk.
Amsterdam gets really amazing with underground bunkers that lift out for collection and call for a truck when full.
The idea is that you take a short walk to dispose of your stuff in a central secure station whenever you have a full bag, and that way you don't feed the rats by storing it or putting it out on the curb for hours.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0JtoSafhvLM
Unfortunately...
By anon
Wed, 03/02/2022 - 4:42pm
...this works in theory, but may not in practice. People are just gonna toss garbage bags (and other containers of garbage) in the general area of public receptacles designated for garbage. Especially if the receptacles are full. Just like they do now. A feast for rodents. Do you really think (some) people will carry their trash back home if the bins are full?
It isn't a theory
By SwirlyGrrl
Thu, 03/03/2022 - 7:37pm
This is in practice in pretty much every European city that I've visited. I have not seen any of the issues that your "theory" predicts. The reality is that it works pretty well.
Can you cite some examples of where it doesn't work and where the results that your "theory" predicts are observed?
I live in an Apartment
By Matt Frank
Thu, 03/10/2022 - 12:19pm
I live in an Apartment building with an outdoor dumpster... I drop off garbage daily. I never have anything more than 24 hours old garbage wise in my apartment
you take a short walk
By Scratchie
Thu, 03/03/2022 - 9:17am
Well, thanks anyway, but this will never fly in America.
Holy shot
By Bananarama
Wed, 03/02/2022 - 6:28pm
Please tell me this is a joke. Please.
Do you legitimately want fewer neighborhood restaurants?
i remember when davis t station was being built...
By schneidz
Wed, 03/02/2022 - 6:34pm
... all the underground rats would go into everyones basement during construction. we got a cat (apparently, for certain rats thats not a good idea but tiger was a happy boy -- i think he actually delivered more pigeons and squirrels to the front porch than rats so we kept him anyways).
I wonder
By perruptor
Thu, 03/03/2022 - 7:29am
I wonder how the "smart boxes" can tell the difference between a rat and a cat, or a racoon, or a rabbit.
Or a squirrel or the difference between a lactating female…
By Lee
Thu, 03/03/2022 - 3:05pm
… and one that does not have babies back in the nest that will slowly die in pain from starvation after the mother gets a “friendly death”.
If there are enough rats to warrant this kind of trap
By cinnamngrl
Thu, 03/03/2022 - 3:35pm
then the rats have already eaten the babies indigenous fauna.
A Modest Proposal?
By Lee
Sat, 03/12/2022 - 3:15pm
More friendliness.
being friendly with rats
By cinnamngrl
Sun, 03/13/2022 - 2:56pm
means no indigenous fauna.
This reminds me of the
By Matt Frank
Wed, 03/02/2022 - 1:40pm
This reminds me of the Vicktor brand of mouse trap I use. It's like a large version of the little black box I pull out every fall when I get a visit from a friend from outside. The little mouse versions work great and have a little internal maze so only mice could really get in there.
I had one of these too. I
By cinnamngrl
Wed, 03/02/2022 - 3:01pm
I had one of these too. I worked pretty well.
Magoo sez
By MisterMagooForYoo
Wed, 03/02/2022 - 1:52pm
Magoo uses have a heart traps. Why? Because Magoo has a heart. Rats are people too. Magoo.
Nothing humane about those either.
By Lee
Wed, 03/02/2022 - 4:09pm
.
imagine if they had one of these in winter hill in early 90s?
By bostnkid
Wed, 03/02/2022 - 1:58pm
it would have saved the FBI years of spent resources and humiliation
Small nit pick
By crispino
Wed, 03/02/2022 - 2:10pm
I hate to be that guy, but since Rattus is the genus it should be capitalized. Thanks for the story though and let's hope these boxes work. I wonder what one of these goes for - Victor makes an indoor-only version with no repository and they are $50 each.
Inspiration!
By MrZip
Wed, 03/02/2022 - 2:24pm
Now I want to go all DIY on rat destruction. Move over Wile E. Coyote and watch what I can do with a pizza crust, and old baking sheet and a busted curling iron!
There's a popular YouTube
By R Hookup
Sun, 03/06/2022 - 8:11pm
There's a popular YouTube channel dedicated to testing rat and other varmint traps. Not a lot of Rube Goldberg efforts, but worth learning what works & doesn't. It's called Mousetrap Mondays.
You sound like Penguin in the
By Refugee
Wed, 03/02/2022 - 2:34pm
You sound like Penguin in the new Batman movie.
Wahhh Wahhh Wahhh
By Gary C
Wed, 03/02/2022 - 4:07pm
.
It's also the species.
By jmeltzer
Wed, 03/02/2022 - 3:33pm
Rattus rattus (unless what we have here is norvegicus )
The latter
By crispino
Wed, 03/02/2022 - 4:47pm
Yeah the all-too-common city interlopers are norvegicus.
Rattus
By RIP Dave
Wed, 03/02/2022 - 6:59pm
Good album, that Rattus norvegicus.
I'll see you in the sewer, brother.
Now if you're a real
By jmeltzer
Thu, 03/03/2022 - 8:15am
Rattus rattus rattus, you're a rat all the way!
How Rattus norvegicus got its name
By necturus
Fri, 03/04/2022 - 6:15am
They're not native to Norway. As far as anyone can tell they originally came from East Asia and spread around the world by sneaking onto ships.
The man who named Rattus norvegicus was Carl Linnaeus, who invented the system used to classify plants and animals by kingdom/phylum/class/order/family/genus/species.
Linnaeus was a Swede. He called the rat "norvegicus" after Sweden's rival, Norway, much as a Red Sox fan might have named it Rattus yankeeus.
Dealing with a dirty yellow-bellied rat
By Robert Winters
Wed, 03/02/2022 - 2:20pm
Let Cagney do it:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-0MkIPGKdAk
Humans and rats are symbiotic
By anon
Wed, 03/02/2022 - 3:02pm
Humans and rats are symbiotic. Humans produce massive amounts of trash, especially food waste. Rats eat the trash. Win win ! Embrace your connection , modern man!
Commensalism, specifically
By Tim Mc.
Wed, 03/02/2022 - 10:53pm
...if you assert that rats benefit and humans neither benefit nor are particularly harmed, which is more or less accurate.
Now, I did have a somewhat mutualist relationship with wild rats for a bit. They got into the compost bin and did a *fantastic* job churning it for me. The compost was rich and gorgeous with basically no work on my part. But then they started dragging in plastic bags and other trash for their nest, so we had to exclude them.
Unfortuntely, they also spoil food and spread disease
By necturus
Fri, 03/04/2022 - 6:18am
However, the rat that spread the Black Death was Rattus rattus not Rattus norvegicus,
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