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News / Life / Pets & Wildlife

Winter no match for Chicago rats

Unwanted guests seek warmth, food in human abodes

By Charles J. Johnson and Robert McCoppin, Chicago Tribune
Published: March 12, 2021, 6:05am

CHICAGO — Chicagoans hoping that brutal cold and epic snowfall would wipe out the rat population in America’s “rattiest city” should know: Rats are much tougher than that.

Pest control experts told the Tribune a few more rats than normal might die this winter, but this spring we’ll still have a full crop of rattus norvegicus.

After all, rats can survive a decade of bombardment by atomic bombs on Pacific atolls. What chance does a few extra inches of snow have?

“Rats can survive in tough environments. They’re tough. They’ll burrow underneath the snow as deep as they can and they can survive this,” said Robert Villamil, owner of Chicago-based Crow Pest Control. “The smaller rats will die off. … But rats are going to make it through.”

As the COVID pandemic took hold last year, forcing restaurants and bars to close, Chicago saw an explosion of rat complaints as the creatures scurried to find alternate dining, another rat expert said.

This winter, there have been more calls, and more urgent requests, as the creatures have gone inside to escape the harsh conditions, said Janelle Iaccino, spokeswoman for Rose Pest Solutions in Chicago.

Exterminators even found fresh rat tracks — tail and all — in the snow that drifted through a crack in the shop’s garage floor, Iaccino said. That shows the importance of using weather stripping, door sweeps, and mesh screens to close any gap the size of a quarter or larger where rats can get in.

“They’re trying to escape the elements,” she said. “They go wherever they can take advantage of human error.”

“Sanitation is key,” Villamil said. “Rats are only here because there’s food for them. They can’t survive here without humans.”

And if rats gets really lean? They’ll cannibalize other rats.

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