logo
Hordes of rats are infesting cities and the $27 billion a year problem is only getting worse

Hordes of rats are infesting cities and the $27 billion a year problem is only getting worse

Yahoo07-02-2025

The saying goes that Kansas City in August is hotter than two rats in a wool sock, but it turns out the rising temperatures from climate change are fueling explosive growth in the global rat population. The warmer weather potentially expands the time they have to breed, putting cities on the back foot in their fight against the vermin.
The latest chapter of New York's centuries-long war on rats has the city throwing everything at the problem—from enforcing new garbage laws, to enlisting bands of vigilante rat-hunters, to putting the rodents on birth control. But while the U.S.' largest city may be gaining ground in the anti-rat battle, the global fight is getting much harder, thanks to problems of humans' own making, new research suggests.
Rising temperatures and more people living in dense environments are set to increase rat presence in some of the world's most important cities, suggests a study published last week in Science Advances. That's bad news for a future where ongoing climate change is projected to push already-elevated temperatures even higher.
'The warmer cities are getting, the faster their rat populations are increasing,' lead author Jonathan Richardson, assistant professor of biology at the University of Richmond, told Fortune.
Richardson and his co-authors found that 11 of 16 global cities for which they obtained data saw their rat populations grow over a decade-long period, with New York, Washington, D.C., and Amsterdam having the biggest growth. Cities where temperatures were rising fastest showed the biggest rodent gains. High rates of urbanization (defined as low rates of green space) as well as larger populations were also objectively rattier, the researchers found.
Only three cities— New Orleans, Louisville and famously clean Tokyo—saw rat populations drop over this period, Richardson said.
As perhaps the most successful mammal in colonizing the globe after Homo sapiens, rats are humans' longtime foils and foes. A constant companion to people ever since the first urban settlements formed thousands of years ago, the rodents have metastasized into a $27-billion-a-year problem in the U.S. alone, damaging crops, chewing up wires, spreading at least 50 distinct diseases, and ripping up lawns, to name just a few issues.
Warmer weather, especially in the winter, gives rats more opportunities to secure food and a potentially longer breeding window, the researchers noted.
'A rat doesn't hibernate, so if it has just a day or two to come above ground and replenish its food cache in its burrow;, that can bolster its survivorship and lead to more baby rats come spring,' Richardson said. 'A rat that is well fed in the winter can reproduce in the winter,' he added.
Rats' remarkable multiplying properties are one reason that pest-control efforts have barely made a dent in urban rat populations: In good conditions, a female rat can produce a litter of a dozen or more pups every month. 'This species is exquisitely adaptive to reproducing and pumping out new rats,' Richardson said. The other is their status as a commensal mammal, meaning one that lives alongside people, 'feeding on our resources and exploiting our own mess that we create for ourselves.' In the Science Advances study, more urbanized environments, defined as those with less green space, were the second-biggest factor behind rat increases after warming temperatures.
All that means that, to effectively deal with the problem, cities have to take a more proactive approach, Richardson said: Rather than trying to poison the rodents into oblivion, cities should make living environments more hostile to rats by eliminating easy food and comfortable breeding quarters. In this regard, he praised New York's efforts to put more trash in secured containers and limit how much time garbage spends on the street before being collected. An early effort in upper Manhattan has shown positive results and is expanding to more neighborhoods, he noted. CIties could also encourage homeowners to clean up their properties to make them inhospitable to rats, even fining those who don't comply.
'Sanitation is the number one strategy that we can use effectively to limit rats,' he added. 'Any city rodent management plan that doesn't start with sanitation and trash removal is bound to fail.'
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘Biggest Booms Since The Big Bang' Found As Black Holes Shred Stars
‘Biggest Booms Since The Big Bang' Found As Black Holes Shred Stars

Forbes

time2 hours ago

  • Forbes

‘Biggest Booms Since The Big Bang' Found As Black Holes Shred Stars

Caption: Artist's concept of the formation of Extreme Nuclear Transients (ENTs). Astronomers have captured the most energetic explosions ever recorded in the universe since the big bang as massive stars get ripped apart by supermassive black holes. These Extreme Nuclear Transients, as they've been named, are a new class of rare and powerful cosmic explosions so bright they appear to release more energy than 100 supernovae (exploding stars). Black holes are such strong gravity that nothing can escape from them, not even photons of light. Supermassive black holes are the most massive type and reside at the centers of galaxies. While some of these black holes continuously consume gas and dust and glow for millions of years, others lie dormant — only revealing themselves when an unlucky star drifts too close. ENTs may be a glimpse into these otherwise unseen objects. 'We've observed stars getting ripped apart as tidal disruption events for over a decade, but these ENTs are different beasts, reaching brightnesses nearly ten times more than what we typically see,' said Jason Hinkle, a doctoral graduate of the University of Hawaii's Institute for Astronomy, who led the study published this week in Science Advances. These powerful events don't just flare and fade quickly. It can take over 100 days for an ENT to reach peak brightness and more than 150 days to dim to half its maximum. A tidal disruption event is when a star gets 'spaghettified' by a supermassive black hole, causing a brilliant flare, but an ENT is even more powerful. 'Not only are ENTs far brighter than normal tidal disruption events, but they remain luminous for years, far surpassing the energy output of even the brightest known supernova explosions," said Hinkle. These flares occur in the centers of galaxies and radiate more energy than any previously known event. At least 10 million times less frequent than supernovae, ENTs occur when massive stars — at least three times more massive than our sun — come too close to a supermassive black hole. A tidal disruption follows, tearing the stars apart and releasing more energy than 100 supernovae. What's different about them is their speed — ENTs allow astronomers to watch as a massive star is 'digested' over time by a supermassive black hole. 'These ENTs don't just mark the dramatic end of a massive star's life,' said Hinkle. 'They illuminate the processes responsible for growing the largest black holes in the universe.' Artist's concept of the formation of Extreme Nuclear Transients (ENTs). The research included data on the most energetic event yet recorded, an ENT named Gaia18cdj. A typical supernova emits about as much energy as the sun ever will over 10 billion years. Gaia18cdj emitted 25 times more energy than the most powerful supernova ever observed. The discovery came from scientists analyzing data from the European Space Agency's Gaia mission, which made three trillion observations of two billion stars while orbiting the sun between 2014 and 2025 when it ran out of fuel. It recorded unexplained flares in 2016 and 2018, with scientists discovering another — called ZTF20abrbeie and nicknamed 'Barbie' — in 2020, using data from the Zwicky Transient Facility survey telescope in California. Follow-ups were then made using data from other telescopes, including the Keck Observatory in Hawaii and NASA's Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory and WISE spacecraft. Artist's concept of the formation of Extreme Nuclear Transients (ENTs). Although all astronomy is looking back in time (even the sun's light is eight minutes old), the brightness of ENTs allows them to be seen over vast distances. That opens up the possibility of seeing them in a time called the 'cosmic noon,' when the universe was half its current age. This was "when galaxies were happening places — forming stars and feeding their supermassive black holes 10 times more vigorously than they do today,' said Benjamin Shappee, Associate Professor at IfA and co-author of the study. 'ENTs provide a valuable new tool for studying massive black holes in distant galaxies.' NASA's Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope, launching as early as 2026, will use its infrared vision to catch these rare flashes from over 12 billion years ago — when the universe was just 10% of its current age — and help astronomers trace how black holes shaped galaxies over cosmic time. Wishing you clear skies and wide eyes.

Ancient DNA reveals mysterious Indigenous group from Colombia that disappeared 2,000 years ago
Ancient DNA reveals mysterious Indigenous group from Colombia that disappeared 2,000 years ago

Yahoo

time11 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Ancient DNA reveals mysterious Indigenous group from Colombia that disappeared 2,000 years ago

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. A new analysis of ancient DNA from hunter-gatherers who lived millennia to centuries ago has revealed a previously unknown genetic lineage of humans who lived in what is now Colombia. People of this lineage lived near present-day Bogotá around 6,000 years ago but disappeared around 4,000 years later, according to a study published May 28 in the journal Science Advances. The findings could shed light on major cultural changes that occurred during that time. It's thought that the first Americans journeyed along the Bering Land Bridge from Asia during the last ice age and arrived in North America at least 23,000 years ago, according to trackways found at White Sands National Park in New Mexico. It's still debated when the first people arrived in South America, but there's evidence of people at the site of Monte Verde II, in Chile, from 14,550 years ago. Some of the early Indigenous people who reached South America settled in the Altiplano, a plateau near what is now Bogotá. This region underwent several cultural shifts during the Early and Middle Holocene (11,700 to 4,000 years ago), and researchers already knew about the development of a type of ceramic pottery that emerged during the Herrera period beginning about 2,800 years ago. But how this technology came to the area is still a matter of debate. To investigate ancient population movements in the region, researchers sequenced genomes using samples from the bones and teeth of 21 skeletons from five archaeological sites in the Altiplano spanning a period of 5,500 years. These included seven genomes from a site known as Checua dating back 6,000 years, nine from the Herrera period around 2,000 years ago, three from the Muisca period, whose remains date to 1,200 to 500 years ago, and two from Guane populations north of Bogotá about 530 years ago. "These are the first ancient human genomes from Colombia ever to be published," study co-author Cosimo Posth, a paleogeneticist at the University of Tübingen in Germany, said in a statement. The genomes from the Checua site belonged to a relatively small group of hunter-gatherers, the team found. Their DNA isn't particularly similar to that of Indigenous North American groups, nor to any ancient or modern populations in Central or South America. "Our results show that the Checua individuals derive from the earliest population that spread and differentiated across South America very rapidly," study co-author Kim-Louise Krettek, a doctoral student at the ​​Senckenberg Center for Human Evolution and Paleoenvironment at the University of Tübingen, said in the statement. But some 4,000 years later, that population had completely vanished. Evidence of their DNA wasn't present in later groups who inhabited the region, either. "We couldn't find descendants of these early hunter-gatherers of the Colombian high plains — the genes were not passed on," Krettek said. "That means in the area around Bogotá there was a complete exchange of the population." The findings suggest that cultural changes that occurred at the start of the Herrera period, such as the more widespread use of ceramics, were brought into the region by migrating groups from Central America into South America sometime between 6,000 and 2,000 years ago. "In addition to technological developments such as ceramics, the people of this second migration probably also brought the Chibchan languages into what is present-day Colombia," study co-author Andrea Casas-Vargas, a geneticist at the National University of Colombia, said in the statement. "Branches of this language family are still spoken in Central America today." Chibchan speakers were widespread in the Altiplano at the time of European contact, and genetic markers linked to people who spoke Chibchan languages first appeared there 2,000 years ago. RELATED STORIES —Newly discovered 'ghost' lineage linked to ancient mystery population in Tibet, DNA study finds —'Mystery population' of human ancestors gave us 20% of our genes and may have boosted our brain function —Unknown human lineage lived in 'Green Sahara' 7,000 years ago, ancient DNA reveals The Chibchan-related ancestry may have spread and mixed with other groups on multiple occasions. The genetic composition of later Altiplano individuals is more similar to that of pre-Hispanic individuals from Panama than to Indigenous Colombians, suggesting some mixing in Colombia. Ancient remains from Venezuela also carry some Chibchan-related ancestry, though they aren't as closely linked to ancient Colombians. This suggests the possibility of multiple Chibchan language expansions into South America. Future studies could involve sequencing more ancient genomes in the Altiplano and nearby regions, the researchers wrote in the study. Such research might help narrow down when Central American populations arrived in the region and how widespread they became.

Astronomers detect most powerful explosions since Big Bang
Astronomers detect most powerful explosions since Big Bang

Yahoo

time20 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Astronomers detect most powerful explosions since Big Bang

At any given time across the universe, massive cosmic bodies are releasing incomprehensible amounts of energy. Stars burn like celestial nuclear fusion reactors, quasars emit thousands of times the luminosity of the Milky Way galaxy, and asteroids slam into planets. But all of these pale in comparison to a new class of events discovered by researchers at the University of Hawai'i's Institute for Astronomy (IfA). According to their findings published June 4 in the journal Science Advances, it's time to classify the universe's most energetic explosions as extreme nuclear transients–or ENTs. ENTs are as devastating as they are rare. They only occur when a massive star at least three times heavier than the sun drifts too close to a supermassive black hole. The colliding forces subsequently obliterate the star, sending out plumes of energy across huge swaths of space. Similar events known as tidal disruption events (TDEs) are known to occur on a (comparatively) smaller scale, and have been documented for over a decade. But ENTs are something else entirely. 'ENTs are different beasts,' study lead author and astronomer Jason Hinkle explained in an accompanying statement. 'Not only are ENTs far brighter than normal tidal disruption events, but they remain luminous for years, far surpassing the energy output of even the brightest known supernova explosions.' Hinkle was first tipped off to ENTs while looking into transients—longlasting flares that spew energy from a galaxy's center. Two particularly strange examples captured by the European Space Agency's Gaia mission caught his eye. The pair of events brightened over a much longer timeframe than previously documented transients, but lacked some of their usual characteristics. 'Gaia doesn't tell you what a transient is, just that something changed in brightness,' Hinkle said. 'But when I saw these smooth, long-lived flares from the centers of distant galaxies, I knew we were looking at something unusual.' Hinkle soon reached out to observatory teams around the world for what would become a multiyear project to understand these anomalies. In the process, a third suspect was detected by the Zwicky Transient Facility at the Palomar Observatory in San Diego. After months of analysis, Hinkle and collaborators realized they were witnessing something unprecedented. The ENTs analyzed by astronomers displayed smoother, longer lasting flares that pointed towards something very particular—a supermassive black hole accreting a giant, wayward star. This contrasts with a more standard black hole that typically acquires its material and energy unpredictably, resulting in irregular brightness fluctuations. The energy and luminosity of an ENT boggles the mind. The most powerful ENT documented in Hinkle's study, Gaia18cdj, generated 25 times more energy than the most powerful known supernovae. For reference, a standard supernova puts out as much energy in a single year as the sun does across its entire 10 billion year lifespan. Gaia18cdj, meanwhile, manages to give off 100 suns' worth of energy over just 12 months. The implications of ENTs and their massive energy surges go far beyond their impressive energy outputs. Astronomers believe they contribute to some of the most pivotal events in the cosmos. 'These ENTs don't just mark the dramatic end of a massive star's life. They illuminate the processes responsible for growing the largest black holes in the universe,' said Hinkle. From here on Earth, ENTs can also help researchers as they continue studying massive, distant black holes. 'Because they're so bright, we can see them across vast cosmic distances—and in astronomy, looking far away means looking back in time,' explained study co-author and astronomer Benjamin Shappee. 'By observing these prolonged flares, we gain insights into black hole growth when the universe was half its current age… forming stars and feeding their supermassive black holes 10 times more vigorously than they do today.' There's a catch for astronomers, however. While supernovae are relatively well-documented, ENTs are estimated to occur at least 10 million times less often. This means that further study requires consistent monitoring of the cosmos backed by the support of international governments, astronomical associations, and the public.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store