Rats are a nuisance in the alleyways and dumpsters of large cities like New York or Washington. But on St. Paul, a volcanic island in the Bering Sea about 200 miles off the Alaskan coast, they threaten entire species. A motley and colorful cast of seabirds, including puffins, parakeets and auklets, call the island home. And a single wayward rodent hiding in the tundra could spread disease and feast on eggs and chicks, to devastating effect.
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The birds’ seclusion makes them vulnerable. Seabirds nest on the ground or in burrows and lack the instincts to escape interloping predators like rats, which aren’t native to the island but sometimes arrive as stowaways on ships. The situation south of St. Paul, on another island chain, shows the worst case scenario.
Rodents were accidentally introduced to some of the Aleutian Islands, which stretch from southern Alaska between the Bering Sea and Pacific Ocean, by military ships during the Second World War. The invasive rat populations that have taken root since have devastated seabird populations.
The one, singular good thing I will say about Alberta is that they solved their rat problem. They are the only rat free province or state in North America.
I wonder if for just one year - NYC cut their yearly ~$10B police budget by 1% and the city spent that ~$100,000,000 on controling rats I wonder what would happen. I bet the piggiest would bring in 10,000s of rats into NYC to guarantee failure and demand that their 1% be given back to them.
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It’s hard to know what the budget actually is. Google results were garbage.