The Star Malaysia

New York puts its rats on ice

American city battling infestatio­n with a more humane alternativ­e – dry ice.

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NEW YORK: A snout and two little black eyes pop out from the hole, too late: A foot already covers them and the hole will be quickly filled with dry ice.

This new weapon in the hands of New York’s sanitation service spells certain death for the rat.

Rick Simeone’s team is at work in Sara D. Roosevelt Park on the Lower East Side, one of Manhattan’s oldest districts.

The day before, they spent more than three hours locating all the entrances to the burrows, 67 in all.

That means there could be more than 250 rattus norvegicus, the scientific name for common brown rats, living there.

Burrow by burrow, the team drops into each hole several small pellets resembling ice cubes but which are actually dry ice, carbon dioxide in solid form.

The surroundin­g air temperatur­e ensures that the carbon dioxide reverts to gaseous form and asphyxiate­s the rats, which are usually asleep at this time of the day.

Normally, 90% to 100% of the rodents are exterminat­ed.

“It’s a method that’s very effective in mostly green spaces, parks,” says Simeone, director of pest control for the New York City Health Department.

“You always hear that rats are winning the battle. But this turns it around.”

Rats have made their home in New York since the middle of the 18th century and are responsibl­e for the transmissi­on of numerous diseases.

A 2014 study published by a PhD candidate at Columbia University estimated about two million rats in the US financial capital, which has a human population of more than 8.5 million.

The rats are most often seen scurrying in the street or in the subway. A celebrated video posted on YouTube in 2015 showed a rat dragging a slice of pizza on the subway stairs.

They live an average of only six or seven months in the port city, but a female can give birth to as many as 100 baby rats each year.

In 2012, John Stellberge­r became the first to use dry ice against rats in the United States, based on an idea from one of his employees.

The head of EHS Pest Control company, Stellberge­r recalls that he spoke of the idea with sanitation officials in Boston, who conducted a brief trial in 2016.

That pilot was suspended after several months pending an approval by the US Environmen­tal Protection Agency, which came in June 2017.

At the beginning of this year after several months of tests, New York officially adopted the dry ice technique, joining Boston, Chicago and Washington.

Dry ice is only used in open spaces, including parks and green areas, Simeone explained, because it would be too complicate­d to identify rat tunnels in the streets or residentia­l areas where concrete is everywhere.

Aside from its effectiven­ess, dry ice presents no risk to wildlife in parks and public gardens, unlike rodenticid­e which had previously been the only weapon deployed against rats.

The newer method, which costs about the same as poison, correspond­s to the times, Stellberge­r explained. Many of his customers ask him to get rid of rats without cruelty.

Simeone said the rodents “sort of go to sleep” as they asphyxiate. — AFP

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 ??  ?? Pest control: New York City Health Department workers placing dry ice into rat burrows at a park in China Town to exterminat­e the rodents. — AFP
Pest control: New York City Health Department workers placing dry ice into rat burrows at a park in China Town to exterminat­e the rodents. — AFP

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