As New Yorkers emerge from pandemic, so do rodents

A rat leaves its burrow at a park in New York City

NEW YORK (AP):

They crawled to the surface as the coronavirus pandemic-roiled New York City, scurrying out of subterranean nests into the open air, feasting on a smorgasbord of scraps in streets, parks and mounds of kerbside garbage. As diners shunned the indoors for outdoor dining, so did the city’s rats.

Now, city data suggest that sightings are more frequent than they’ve been in a decade.

Through to April, people have called in some 7,400 rat sightings to the city’s 311 service request line. That’s up from about 6,150 during the same period last year, and up by more than 60 per cent from roughly the first four months of 2019, the last pre-pandemic year.

In each of the first four months of 2022, the number of sightings was the highest recorded since at least 2010, the first year online records are available. By comparison, there were about 10,500 sightings in all of 2010 and 25,000 such reports in all of last year (sightings are most frequent during warm months).

Whether the rat population has increased is up for debate, but the pandemic might have made the situation more visible.

With more people spending time outdoors as temperatures grow warmer, will rat sightings further surge?

“That depends on how much food is available to them and where,” said Matt Frye, a pest management specialist for the state of New York, who is based at Cornell University.

While a return to pre-pandemic routines “is exciting after two years of COVID-imposed lifestyle changes,” Frye said in an email, “it also means business as usual for rat problems that are directly tied to human behaviour.”

BEEN A PROBLEM
Rats have been a problem in New York City since its founding. Every new generation of leaders has tried to find a better way of controlling the rodent population and struggled to show results.

When Mayor Eric Adams was borough president of Brooklyn, he annoyed animal rights activists – and upset the stomachs of some journalists – by demonstrating a trap that used a bucket filled with a vinegary, toxic soup to drown rats lured by the scent of food.

Former Mayor Bill de Blasio spent tens of millions of dollars on efforts to reduce the rat population in targeted neighbourhoods through more frequent trash pickup, more aggressive housing inspections, and replacing dirt basement floors in some apartment buildings with ones made of concrete.

The city also launched a programme to use dry ice to suffocate rats in their burrows, once demonstrating the technique for reporters at an event where workers chased – but never caught – one of the fleeing critters.

During a recent news conference in Times Square, Adams announced the city’s latest effort: padlocked kerbside trash bins intended to reduce the big piles of garbage bags that turn into a buffet for rodents.

“You’re tired of the rodents, you’re tired of the smell, you’re tired of seeing food, waste and spillage,” the mayor said.

Rats not only strike fear among the easily squeamish, they can also be a public health concern.

Last year, at least 13 people were hospitalised – one died – because of leptospirosis, a condition that attacks the kidneys and liver. Most human infections are associated with rats.

You might also like