Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Experts: Aggressive rodents not issue in capital

- KAT STROMQUIST

LITTLE ROCK — Despite federal public health officials’ warnings of “unusual or aggressive behavior” by starved rodents in cities shut down by the coronaviru­s, exterminat­ors say Little Rock-area rats and mice have kept their usual routines.

The lack of a stay-at-home order likely helped the state’s whiskered, string-tailed residents, according to pest profession­als and experts.

Ongoing business activity kept rats in apple cores, chicken bones and ketchup packets, said Richard Sims, a pest control manager for Curry’s Termite, Pest and Animal Control.

Some cities that did close a little bit more “had more of a larger [rodent] presence felt, just because of the absence of the food,” he said. “[But] I am not observing anything here in Central Arkansas.”

Jim Fredericks, chief entomologi­st with the National Pest Management Associatio­n, agreed. “Many of the rats in these metro areas are under food stress right now, and part of that is due to the shelter-in-place restrictio­ns and the quarantine restrictio­ns,” he said.

In May, the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on its website urged health regulators to watch for upticks in rodent activity, drawing comparison­s with behavioral changes seen after natural disasters. Industry webinars emphasized the same issue, Sims said.

But thus far, the Arkansas Department of Health hasn’t received reports of newly mobilized vermin, said that agency’s public health veterinari­an, Dr. Laura Rothfeldt.

She surmised that could be because of grass and fields in close proximity to the capital city, as well as fewer business interrupti­ons amid the outbreak.

“We don’t have that big concrete jungle. They have options,” she said of rats, mice and other rodents. “We do have concerns about it, of course, if that were to happen, because they are vectors of certain diseases.”

In Arkansas, environmen­tal health officials look into rodent complaints to monitor for leptospiro­sis and salmonella, bacterial infections that spread via animal urine and feces. Tularemia, another infection, comes from the rodents’ ticks and fleas.

The illness most popularly associated with rats — plague — hasn’t been seen in Arkansas since at least 1970, according to CDC data. (Research published in the journal in 2018 also questions a connection between rats and the Black Death pandemic, which killed millions of people but actually may have spread through body lice and human fleas, scientists wrote.)

Broadly, it isn’t as if Central Arkansas lacks for rodents, exterminat­ors say. Since January, Sims said, he has had more than 80 commercial calls to attend to house mice, roof rats and Norway rats, often in the downtown area where sewers and structures are older and to their liking.

“The Heights is probably one of the most expensive real estate [locations] in Little Rock, but it has almost as much rodent activity as downtown, just because it’s an older neighborho­od,” he said. Plentiful bird feeders in that area don’t help.

Although he’s seen few changes in rodent activity levels this spring, recent heavy rains are the sort of weather that leads to more rat, mouse and ant calls, said John Clark, an owner of Clark Exterminat­ing in North Little Rock.

Sightings also surge in the fall, in his experience. When the weather turns, rodents scout places to nest, squeaking through air-conditioni­ng units, holes in gas lines or dryer vents — “anything the size of a dime,” he said.

Nationally, the CDC’s rat alert sparked a rash of lurid headlines, including reports of possible cannibalis­m among rats in New York City. But experts said most people shouldn’t worry — much — about four-footed intruders.

“What we aren’t going to see are hordes of angry rats leaving the downtown area,” Fredericks said.

People should work to control any infestatio­ns as they usually would, he said, in part because mice are thought to contribute to allergies and, via chewing of electrical cords, to house fires.

Hendrix College biology professor Maureen McClung, whose research studies how human activity affects animal behavior, said she found the CDC’s choice of words “kind of vague,” adding that people shouldn’t feel anxious about “aggressive” rodents.

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