The Boston City Council today agreed to look at using rodent birth-control pellets to try to control the city's burgeoning supply of rats, by building on a pilot started in Jamaica Plain last year that one councilor said had meant an 80% reduction in the gnawing, long-tailed vermin.
City Councilors Enrique Pepén (Hyde Park, Mattapan, Roslindale) and Ruthzee Louijeune (at large) say current rodenticides have killed bald eagles and hawks in the Boston area, almost killed an owl and pose a menace to dogs and cats that eat rodenticide-laced rats - and possibly even to small children who might come in contact with them.
"Our families deserve a safe and effective strategy to keep wildlife away from our homes," as do pets, he said, adding it's time to end the use of today's rodenticides, which work by causing internal bleeding in not just rats but anything that might eat them or even come in contact with them.
Louijeune said a pilot program involving sugar-coated rat-specific birth control pellets left out along some blocks in Jamaica Plain's Hyde Square, including Cranston Street, meant a noticeable decrease in the number of rats as female rats consumed the pellets and stop ovulating - an 80% reduction in rat sightings in one case.
Residents along the streets worked with a group called Wisdom Good Works to set up, re-stock birth-control stations and to monitor the local rat population.
The councilors said that, in contrast to rodenticides, the birth control pellets are harmless to other species.
Louijeune, who said she's been on dozens of "rat walks" in Jamaica Plain, said the more than two dozen birth-control stations in JP had to be outfitted with special cages that would let rats in but not raccoons and squirrels, not because the substance is harmful to those animals but because they were eating so much that there wasn't enough left for the rats.
Pepén tallied some of the damage done by anticoagulant-laced rats, including the death of MK the bald eagle in Arlington and Owen the owl, saved after being found bleeding from his eyes at Faneuil Hall.
Pepén said a recent study by Tufts University's wildlife clinic found that every single red-tailed hawk tested in the Boston area had traces of the rodenticide in their systems.
City Councilor Ed Flynn (South Boston, South End, Chinatown, Downtown), who has long called for the creation of a formal rat-czar position and the hiring of enough rodent-control workers to war on rats 24/7, said he would watch the birth-control experiments closely. He said he fears that some families with young children are now even considering just moving out of Boston because of all the rats.
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Comments
Somerville tried “rodent birth control†a decade ago
By cdevers
Wed, 07/10/2024 - 4:57pm
Somerville tried “rodent birth control†in 2014, and the project does not seem to have been a success — the pilot program was already over by 2018.
I’m curious what if anything Boston feels they’ve learned from Somerville’s similar program, and if they think they’ll have more success with this approach.
In ten years possibly improvements…
By Lee
Wed, 07/10/2024 - 5:12pm
… to the system have been made. It’s worth a try because using rodenticides has been a public health and environmental disaster.
We can do better
By Sator
Wed, 07/10/2024 - 6:28pm
That was one company testing one product in 2014.
It's not a new technique, it's not cutting edge science. Learned all about this at a state school, 30 years ago.
It's harm reduction, and we should be trying everything so we can stop using biocides.
All the work being done to restore raptor populations is being worked AGAINST by people who are not required to consider the impacts to other wildlife as they use a sledgehammer to solve a problem. We are also killing pets like cats and dogs who eat the carcasses that lead to painful internal bleeding that cannot be stopped.
It was fine in the 50s, when we didn't know better and we were all hard assholes.
Now we know better and we MUST do better, no more excuses.
The rat problem in winter
By anon
Wed, 07/10/2024 - 7:22pm
The rat problem in winter hill is crazy bad.
Allston too, living up to our nickname
By FakeBostonCharlie
Thu, 07/11/2024 - 11:01am
At night they swarm in the apartment gardens along Comm. Ave. You can see the burrows they dig in the yards and the building managements seem to do nothing about it.
Bostonians have much more to fear …
By Lee
Wed, 07/10/2024 - 5:18pm
… from other humans than from rats.
I’d like to see more efforts towards reducing the human population. Could we please add birth control pills to our water supply?
Just don't go there, please.
By SwirlyGrrl
Wed, 07/10/2024 - 6:34pm
Where does it end? You think it is cool to stop "breeders" but many others would think it a great idea to eliminate gay people, people with disabilities, older people ... people like you (what ever that happens to mean).
Not to mention the misogyny of targeting women's reproductive freedom, given that said "birth control" is only for women.
Trumpers love to ignore consent issues and control women's bodies and this isn't any better an "idea". Besides, there are enough exogenous hormones and endocrine disruptors in our environment already.
I upvoted
By Will LaTulippe
Wed, 07/10/2024 - 7:18pm
Both Lee and Swirly.
Spiking the water supply is not cool, and, in fact, is horrifying.
You gotta write people a giant check for their cooperation.
You actually thought I was serious?
By Lee
Wed, 07/10/2024 - 8:49pm
Yes
By Plen-T-Pak
Wed, 07/10/2024 - 10:03pm
.
We don't know
By Will LaTulippe
Thu, 07/11/2024 - 1:05am
First day on the internet?
You actually thought I was serious?
By Lee
Wed, 07/10/2024 - 8:49pm
Yes.
By Plen-T-Pak
Wed, 07/10/2024 - 10:08pm
Yes.
Yes.
You actually thought I was serious?
By Lee
Wed, 07/10/2024 - 8:51pm
LOL
And your post makes little sense. Maybe there is something in the water you’re drinking.
Hahaha...let's say we should
By anon
Wed, 07/10/2024 - 8:59pm
Hahaha...let's say we should kill a bunch of people, and then say, I'm only joking! Can't you take a joke?
Nice one...
Who said anything about killing people?
By Lee
Thu, 07/11/2024 - 7:24am
Can you read?
What are you drinking?
By Plen-T-Pak
Wed, 07/10/2024 - 10:07pm
.
You actually needed to say this three times?
By lbb
Thu, 07/11/2024 - 9:10am
Hmm...
Not me.
By Lee
Thu, 07/11/2024 - 9:33am
The software did it.
Get over it.
lol
By lbb
Thu, 07/11/2024 - 11:39am
"get over it" is your constant response every time you screw up.
Does it irritate you?
By Lee
Thu, 07/11/2024 - 3:02pm
Does it bother you that it had nothing to do with me after all?
Get over it.
Seriously inappropriate
By SwirlyGrrl
Thu, 07/11/2024 - 7:59pm
You were seriously inappropriate.
Your intent was irrelevant.
"It's just a joke" is Trumper territory to cover for things you should know better than to say.
Whatever you say, Ma.
By Lee
Thu, 07/11/2024 - 9:17pm
Am I grounded now?
"On the Internet, nobody knows you're a dog"
By Don't Panic
Fri, 07/12/2024 - 1:32am
n/t
Woof!
By Lee
Fri, 07/12/2024 - 8:47am
.
No garbage pickup if not in
By Anon
Wed, 07/10/2024 - 5:23pm
No garbage pickup if not in an approved bin. Done.
Umm….
By Bob Leponge
Thu, 07/11/2024 - 7:32am
I’m not clear on how leaving the garbage that’s improperly contained, on the street instead of picking it up, actually helps the rat problem.
It doesn't matter
By cybah
Thu, 07/11/2024 - 10:42am
In a bin or not in a bin.. the rats will manage to chew anything to get to food.
Chelsealand rolled out 'rodent proof" barrels several years ago. Overtime the rats have chewed thru a corner of this thick plastic bin and along the edges along the top. Now they can just slide in and out just by sticking their nose in and pushing up.
It never really helped much that much..
Super Rats
By Don't Panic
Fri, 07/12/2024 - 1:48am
They are real. Saw a PBS documentary about them.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cosTXRzBb0E
Wrong video. This one is about how New York became a rat kingdom. The Super Rat documentary I meant to post showed rats gnawing through concrete walls and steel mesh. Turns out rats are becoming pesticide resistant too; well at least in Britain.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EWeN9ucrV4c
Reminds me of the Super
By Lee
Fri, 07/12/2024 - 8:56am
Reminds me of the Super Predators of Central Park.
Racism, specism, humans gotta hate.
Don't bogart that stuff you're smoking
By SwirlyGrrl
Fri, 07/12/2024 - 10:23am
Puff puff pass, mkay?
Tricky
By Guanden Villenge
Wed, 07/10/2024 - 6:26pm
Getting the condoms on is really tough to do.
But the males rats …
By Lee
Fri, 07/12/2024 - 8:50am
… are finally taking some responsibility.
#Magoo sez
By MisterMagooForYoo
Wed, 07/10/2024 - 6:50pm
Magyoo dirty rat. magyoo did it to Magoo’s brother now Magoo’s gonna do it to magyoo. #Magoo.
What about dry ice?
By cinnamngrl
Thu, 07/11/2024 - 7:04am
What about dry ice?
That is safe. No biocides.
In my limited experience, dry
By Bob Leponge
Thu, 07/11/2024 - 7:35am
In my limited experience, dry ice has been very effective. It works well in underground burrows, but not if the rats are living in a stone wall or in the walls of a building.
But still cruel and inhumane.
By Lee
Thu, 07/11/2024 - 9:36am
.
Dry ice is far less cruel than other methods
By Neal
Thu, 07/11/2024 - 10:16am
When dry ice sublimates, it turns into CO2 gas, which, if I understand correctly, basically puts them to sleep permanently within minutes, as opposed to anticoagulant poisons which cause their organs to fail, is painful, and takes hours to days to kill them, during which they suffer, not to mention the risk to wildlife that may consume poisoned vermin. Or snap or glue traps, which don't always (or don't usually in the case of glue traps) kill instantly. The only other method that comes close are electric rat traps, which instantly electrocute and kill rodents that step on two charged plates after being lured into the trap. They're probably dead before they even know what hit them.
Yes
By cybah
Thu, 07/11/2024 - 10:49am
I agree Dry ice is ideal. The issue is the Fed. They have to ease restrictions on its use for us to use it for this. We gotta.. this rat issue is out of control.
I also agree about the anticoagulants. I have mice in my basement and I put out bait, which contain this poison. Came down into the basement one day, and little mouse was flip flopping and moving very slowly. Poor thing musta ate some poison and it hadn't quiet set in yet. Horrible thing to see.
(I did take them outside and put them in the planter out back to die in nature)
Glue traps are just mean. They get stuck to it and cannot move (or often they shake like a MFer to get off of it). I caught a mouse one day in one, and it was half hanging off the glue pad. It was wiggling with a MF to get off. So I took another glue trap and put it glue side down on top to mush them in there. Right before I put it down on top, I heard an audible "sighhhh" like the mouse knew it had been defeated.
I was so distraught that I put it into a trash bag, threw a cup of vegetable oil inside and took it out to the trash bin, untied. I hope the little guy was able to free himself. (oil will help a mouse get unstuck)
Yeah I am a sucker but still.. having one lunge at you when you open a cupboard is enough not to care as much anymore.
“ but still.. having one
By Lee
Thu, 07/11/2024 - 3:06pm
“ but still.. having one lunge at you when you open a cupboard is enough not to care as much anymoreâ€
Eek! A mouse!!
It’s a mouse. Not a Grizzly.
But
By Don't Panic
Fri, 07/12/2024 - 1:52am
But we're talking about rats. If a rat jumps out of your pantry anybody would freak out no matter how tough you think you are.
He was talking about a cute little Minnie Mouse.
By Lee
Fri, 07/12/2024 - 8:51am
Or maybe just an airborne dust bunny.
But some people do enjoy playing hide and seek with their pet rats.
Gimme
By cybah
Fri, 07/12/2024 - 7:19am
Gimme your street address so I can send a box of mice to your house. We'll see what you say when they burrow thru your food in your pantry, then you open the door and it jumps toward you.
Yes mice may be small and furry (and sometimes cute) they also carry disease. No thanks.
You just need a mouse whisperer.
By Lee
Fri, 07/12/2024 - 8:58am
Worry more about the many more diseases you can catch from humans.
It's late stage capitalism
By Bob Leponge
Thu, 07/11/2024 - 6:16pm
It's late stage capitalism, with a healthy measure of regulatory capture.
Use of dry ice for rodent control was previously fine.
Until someone lobbied the EPA to declare that dry ice was a pesticide and needed to be regulated. And the EPA started telling cities that their use of dry ice was illegal. Which would be kind of like the EPA declaring that water is a pesticide, and declaring that flooding rat burrows with water was therefore illegal.
Meanwhile, somebody, obtained a registration for their own branded dry ice, which was a legal pesticide.
At the same time somebody, started making complaints that cities were using unregistered pesticides (dry ice) to kill rats, and so the dry ice rat control programs were shut down.
But it gets even better: Somebody stepped in with a solution: The city could buy their labels indicating that the dry ice was a registered pesticide. and then go back to the same place you had always been buying dry ice, stick the (expensive) label on the box, and you were legally good to go.
Pure parasitism.
https://www.universalhub.com/2020/cold-comfort-bos...
For future reference ...
By SwirlyGrrl
Fri, 07/12/2024 - 10:36am
Don't use anticoagulants ... and don't put poisoned rodents outside.
The problem with poison is it doesn't know when to stop killing. Those ambulatory poisoned rodents have been killing all the raptors and predators in the area, including bald eagles, numerous hawks, owls and anything else that we want to stay alive to eat things. This exacerbates the rodent problem.
Since my dear tuxie Maine Coon headed across the rainbow bridge last winter we have been live trapping mice and relocating them to the nearby parks and woods well away from houses. If raptors should snack on them they won't keep killing.
You're a far better person
By cybah
Fri, 07/12/2024 - 12:34pm
You're a far better person than me, Swirly. Far better.
Relocating wild animals is cruel and inhumane.
By Lee
Fri, 07/12/2024 - 2:14pm
Not to mention that it spreads disease.
That’s why it’s illegal.
Mice?
By SwirlyGrrl
Fri, 07/12/2024 - 6:21pm
Seriously?
How many comments in the last three days for you? Maybe watch the Tour de France or get a job or something ...
Biology is apparently not your strong point.
By Lee
Fri, 07/12/2024 - 8:51pm
.
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