The Daily Telegraph - Saturday

New York considers rat birth control to tackle infestatio­n

- By Verity Bowman

OFFICIALS in New York are considerin­g putting local rats on birth control as part of a “shock-and-awe” plan to get the exploding population under control.

Salty pellets that sterilise male and female rats could soon be administer­ed by the city’s health department under new proposals.

Shaun Abreu, the Manhattan council member who proposed the programme, said: “We believe that we need to take a shock-and-awe approach to the rat problem by throwing everything we have at it.”

The contracept­ives – known as “ContraPest pellets” – would be used in rat migration zones that span across 10 city blocks. Rats are avid breeders, with one pair having the potential to produce 15,000 pups a year. It is thought that there are up to 3million rats in the city.

This is not the first time officials have turned to contracept­ives to rein in the rodents, which are a common sight on subway platforms and in the streets.

In 1967, Governor Nelson Rockefelle­r revealed plans to dissolve a form of oestrogen found in human birth control into vegetable oil and lacing it with meat and grains. Ten years ago the Metropolit­an Transporta­tion Authority and Bryant Park also tried contracept­ives. Other tactics – like poison, traps and dry ice – have failed to address the problem.

Mr Abreu predicted that this new push would be more effective as it will be paired with the city’s other recently introduced methods, like putting rubbish in containers and expanding composting.

He said that other attempts were unsuccessf­ul as officials used liquid bait and did not separate off rubbish.

There are hopes that the contracept­ives will be more environmen­tally and wildlife friendly than traditiona­l rat poison. Just last month Flaco, the escaped owl from Central Park Zoo, died after ingesting such chemicals.

“Birds of prey shouldn’t have to eat rats that have rodenticid­e,” said Mr Abreu.

Eric Adams, the mayor of New York City, has made fighting the rodents a cornerston­e initiative, appointing Kathleen Corradi as his very own rat eliminator to office last year.

Liz Garcia, a spokesman for the mayor, said earlier this week that his office would review the legislatio­n.

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