Rat infestation hits Joburg



Uncollected refuse in the Johannesburg CBD as a result of the recent garbage strike has reportedly led to a rat infestation, and concern about associated health risks. Are rats really the dread disease-carriers they're said to be, and , even if they're not, what can you do to keep them off your property?

 



Ever since the bubonic plague, which wiped out a third of the population of Northern Europe in the fourteenth century, the unfortunate rat has become a symbol of disease and imminent return to the Dark Ages. It wasn't even the rats' fault -- they carried the fleas which carried the real culprit: the plague bacterium. But the rat's rep was tarnished permanently.   

Rats can transmit diseases to humans, but if you keep a clean home and practise good basic hygiene, the risk of getting any of these diseases is very low. You don't want to encourage them to live inside your house, but the odd humble rodent sighted in your neighbourhood is not sufficient reason to call the health authorities or the heavy-duty exterminators.

You also don't have to put out poison, glue traps or snap-traps -- all of which cause painful death and can hurt other animals and children.

I liked this reader's unhysterical and earnestly eco-rodentia-friendly posting to the Envirohealth Forum:

I have rats living in my outbuildings (In the eaves & roof). They hide in the day but come out at night. I have tried putting a lot of mint all over the place but haven't rid myself of them yet. The dogs sleep in this space as well & their food is there, should I move the food out? I don't want to kill the rats, I just want them to move on.

Getting rats to 'move on'
It's commendable to use preventative measures rather than killing rodents, and not too difficult if you're consistent. At least give it a good try before going the trap and poison route, or calling in the pest exterminators.

Basically, to help keep rodents off your property, you need to make it undesirable to them. They're after food, water, shelter and easy access, so reduce the availability of these:

Live trap and release is also something to consider. The idea is that you make your home undesirable to rodents, then you trap any remaining using a trap that catches the animal without maiming or killing them. The National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals suggests contacting the company Animal Handling Support Systems , which supplies humane traps. You then release the rats as soon as possible away from, or at least outside, your rodent-proofed home. And repeat, until the rats get the message and move on to greener pastures.

 

 

[ Olivia Rose-Innes, EnviroHealth Editor, Health24, updated April 2011 ]