charisstoma: (default)
charisstoma ([personal profile] charisstoma) wrote2016-11-30 09:36 am

They have to be trained... the academy

The Best Secret Weapon Against Landmines and Tuberculosis Is a Rat
African giant pouched rats are better mine-sniffers than dogs and faster at TB diagnosis than human doctors.

By Elisabeth Waugaman




Thanks to HeroRAT teams, 270 square miles of Mozambique farmland are once again available to farmers dislocated since the 1980s. HeroRATS exposed 13,826 mines, 29,031 small arms and ammunitions, and 39,601 leftover unexploded munitions. Removing landmines not only saves lives but also and restores land for farming, development, and safe travel, including delivery of emergency aid.





The rats are many times more efficient at this job than humans. In 30 minutes a rat can do what it takes a human a day to do—if a human could do it at all. Metal detectors not only fail to discern between metal rubbish and active ordinance, but also have difficulty finding landmines now made predominantly out of plastic.

HeroRATs are also a better demining solution than dogs, who have long been the go-to animal for mine detection. Rats have a working life span equivalent to that of dogs, and work similar hours—from about 5 a.m. to 9 a.m., before it gets too hot—and in almost every other way the rats are superior.

[identity profile] 2metaldog.livejournal.com 2016-11-30 09:15 pm (UTC)(link)
Rats are very smart and quite loving and make awesome pets. They have an amazing amount of personality packed into such a small creature. My only issue with the rats I've had (not the giant gambian pouch rat variety), which is totally not their fault, is that their lives are woefully short (about 2 years). I was completely crushed when they passed away and after going through it several times over about 4 years, I just couldn't do that any more.

I would, however, have one of these adorable rats as a pet, especially with their longer life span. And I would beg to differ about rats not bonding. They do. They're just willing to be very friendly with others, too.

And I do have a giant gambian pouch rat in my zombie novel that belongs to one of the mains. That rat, Precious, can detect zombies when they're still a good distance away *nods*.

[identity profile] charisstoma.livejournal.com 2016-12-01 12:44 am (UTC)(link)
I've read of a study of rat culture where the population reached a state that it mimicked human culture under similar conditions, with juvenile males forming gangs, rampaging thru the colony and raping. There's been another study that found a different but no less similar result of a depressed state of mind.

Crows/ravens and rats, to name a few, seem to show a sentient state of being with; problem solving capability, and empathy that allows altruistic actions. Crows will even barter or encourage continued feeding through the giving of treasures from their gathered troves. It gives a basis for why early humans would acknowledge them as a different, intelligent variety of beings, or gods.

Edited 2016-12-01 00:49 (UTC)