Rodents Attack
Rodents are extremely diverse in their ecology and lifestyles and can be found in almost every terrestrial habitat, including human-made environments. Species can be arboreal, fossorial (burrowing), saltatorial/richochetal (leaping on their hind legs), or semiaquatic. However, all rodents share several morphological features, including having only a single upper and lower pair of ever-growing incisors.
Well-known rodents include mice, rats, squirrels, prairie dogs, porcupines, beavers, guinea pigs, and hamsters. Rabbits, hares, and pikas, whose incisors also grow continually (but have two pairs of upper incisors instead of one), were once included with them, but are now considered to be in a separate order, the Lagomorpha. Nonetheless, Rodentia and Lagomorpha are sister groups, sharing a single common ancestor and forming the clade of Glires.
Most rodents are small animals with robust bodies, short limbs, and long tails. They use their sharp incisors to gnaw food, excavate burrows, and defend themselves. Most eat seeds or other plant material, but some have more varied diets. They tend to be social animals and many species live in societies with complex ways of communicating with each other. Mating among rodents can vary from monogamy, to polygyny, to promiscuity. Many have litters of underdeveloped, altricial young, while others are precocial (relatively well developed) at birth. Source
1. Burning Down the House
Rodents have a tendency to bite through the electrical line, but they can also bite through blocks and lead vessels with their extremely sharp teeth. Why do rodents do this? Rodent's front teeth can turn 4.5 to 5.5 inches each year, so rodents bite and chew on anything to have their teeth in line. So how can those razor-like fangs kill you?
2. Architectural Disaster
Because rodents will bite by just on anything, they can produce expensive—and severe—architectural damage as well. In 2000 only, rodents generated a huge $19 billion in industrial disaster in residential environments. Can you visualize how much destruction they cause now?
Rodents can chew through the basic wood framing of your home, including floor beams, headers, posts, and rooftop. They will eat through sheetrock, soft pavement, and despite your drywall. Primarily, rodents can and will chew into your home to get anywhere they want. Will this total loss kill you? If a support bar stumbles and can't hold its weight, yes, your house could probably tumble down around you.
3. Rodent-Bite Fever
Rodents spread the virus through their saliva, but you don't have to be worried or scratched by an infected rodent to get a rodent-bite fever (RBF). You can catch RBF by handling a rodent with the virus or eating food or juices that infected rodents have been infected with Streptobacillus Moniliformis (in North America) or Spirillum minus (mainly in Asia). RBF taken by consuming infected food or liquid is named Haverhill fever. Signs include fever, vomiting, and joint torment. The more critical sicknesses connected with RBF involve diseases of the heart, mind, lungs, and even sores in the internal organs. RBF is typically treated with antibiotics, but if it's not managed, RBF can be deadly.
4. Other Complications
If you believe RBF sounds seem dangerous, you will also be more upset to discover that rodents can bring dozens of other severe and possibly fatal infectious diseases. Their anger, urine, and wastes also can create severe allergic responses. Some of the diseases rodents are fun to include:
Leptospirosis: This dangerous infection decreased through appearance to infected rat urine. It can result in renal and liver failure, not to mention cardiovascular issues and even death, if untreated, as it did in the Bronx in 2017.
Typhus: Rats are hosts to fleas that can carry and transmit typhus and other diseases to humans.
Hantavirus: Hantavirus is acquired through breathing in dust contaminated with infected rat urine or droppings, through direct contact with infected rats or their urine or droppings, or being bitten by an infected rat. The symptoms are often mistaken for flu, and this disease can be fatal if not treated right away.
Plague: You might think the epidemic went out with the Middle Ages, a time when tens of millions died from the disease, but it can still acquire through bites from infected fleas or direct contact with an infected rat. According to National Geographic, more than 2,100 human cases were reported worldwide in 2003, and 180 deaths were recorded in that same year. In 2006, 50 people died from plague in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. And included on the list of countries with human plague cases in recent years is the United States.
Although these might seem like extreme examples of how a rat can kill you, they're all very real. They are also completely preventable. If you're worried about rats on your property but want a humane solution to the problem, invest in A24 automatic rat traps. The A24 rodent solution automatically resets after each kill, works on rats and mice, kills rodents instantly using a CO2-powered striker, is toxin-free and humane, and is long-lasting.
How To Get Rid Of Rodents
- Keep storm cellars and upper rooms mess-free.
- Kill any overabundance dampness around the house.
- Store kindling somewhere around 20 feet from the home.
- Keep food in sealed shut compartments and discard trash consistently.



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