Taranaki Daily News

Oh rats! It’s time to go

Rats have the ability to multiply and get into places you don’t want them. Jeanne Huber has answers on how to stop them.

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Question: Rats are a huge problem in city gardens, chewing through fences and basement doors, and burrowing. The poisons, traps, organics and predator pee don’t stop them for long. Our block is invaded. The rats are very good at gnawing through/burrowing around barriers such as grade 3 steel wool. Do we all have to dig 1.5 e metres and pour cement?

Answer: As you’ve experience­d, rats have amazing abilities to multiply and get into places they want to be.

A female rat can mature enough to start reproducin­g after only three or four months, and can have eight or more babies every month. Adding to the problem is the fact that rats are rodents, which means their teeth grow constantly – 12.7 centimetre­s a year.

They need to chew through wood and other materials just to keep their teeth trimmed. And of course they often gnaw or dig to get to food, which can be almost anything: the food we eat, even if it’s rotting, as well as pet waste and other things we’d never touch.

Because rats have long, flexible bodies made for burrowing, adults can squeeze through holes as narrow as

25 millimetre­s in diameter.

Rats typically burrow down about

45cm to nest (if they can’t find an indoor home), but they are capable of digging down much deeper if a foundation is in the way and they think food is on the other side.

Obviously, predator pee probably isn’t going to stop them. But your mention of steel wool and concrete is on the right track.

To keep rats out of buildings, it does work to seal all holes and to fortify places where they gnaw. If you don’t have the time or the ability to seal all holes in exterior floors, walls and foundation­s, hire a pest-control company to do this for you.

Removing easily accessible food also goes a long way. The castoffs from outdoor bird feeders and open garbage cans or compost piles, for example, are a huge draw for rats.

However, when it comes to keeping rats out of gardens or dealing with a neighbourh­ood-wide infestatio­n, exclusion alone probably isn’t going to work.

You can keep them from digging into specific garden beds by placing sturdy, quarter-inch wire mesh under mulch or soil where rats have been digging. But there is no way to wall them out from a whole yard or neighbourh­ood.

Your local pest control can also look around and recommend things you might not have thought of that can make a difference.

– The Washington Post

 ??  ?? Rats need to chew through wood and other materials just to keep their teeth trimmed.
Rats need to chew through wood and other materials just to keep their teeth trimmed.

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