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How Cities Are Using Dry Ice To Kill Rats (usatoday.com)

Some of the United States' biggest cities have resorted to using dry ice to kill rats. Since dry ice (frozen carbon dioxide) turns into a gas, sanitation officials simply need to drop chunks of it into rat infested burrows and let science do the rest. Longtime Slashdot reader mi writes: USA Today reports: "Earlier this week, USA TODAY observed Chicago sanitation department workers at one of the city's oldest parks scoop chunks of smoking dry ice into a burrow before quickly covering the entry and exit holes with dirt and newspaper to stop any rats from escaping as the -109.3-degree Fahrenheit gas dissipated. Sanitation workers say they treat burrows during morning hours, when rats are less active and most likely to be huddled inside the burrows. The asphyxiated dead rats then decompose in place and out-of-sight of city denizens who count the disease-carrying vermin among the vilest of indignities of urban living. 'We are seeing 60% fewer burrows in areas where we are using the dry ice,' said Charles Williams, Chicago's streets and sanitation commissioner. 'It's more environmentally friendly, and it's very humane on the rodents as well.'" Humane or not, what is so especially "undignified" about rats? What makes them worse, than, for example, cats, deer or wild horses?

17 of 429 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Not a nice way to die by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    who fuckin cares. They're rats.

  2. What's undignified about rats? by fredrated · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They carry disease, eat infrastructure, chew holes in your house, shit and pee on your stuff, chew holes in your stuff, eat and contaminate your food, and many more things I can't fit into the margin of this book.

    1. Re:What's undignified about rats? by PsychoSlashDot · · Score: 5, Funny

      They carry disease, eat infrastructure, chew holes in your house, shit and pee on your stuff, chew holes in your stuff, eat and contaminate your food, and many more things I can't fit into the margin of this book.

      Yes, children are unpleasant little monsters, aren't they?

      --
      "Oh no... he found the .sig setting."
  3. What's undignified about rats? by TheCycoONE · · Score: 5, Informative

    "Humane or not, what is so especially "undignified" about rats? What makes them worse, than, for example, cats, deer or wild horses?"

    The author of the summary has obviously never had a rat infestation. They can swim, dig several feet down, chew through concrete, plastic, wood, drywall, and otherwise go to amazing destructive measures to get to a heat or food source. Unlike mice, keeping your food in the cupboard or Tupperware containers is useless as they chew right through them, and destroy your home's foundation while they are at it. No, rats are not at all like wild horses, cats, or deer. Rats are a special kind of hell.

    If you need an ecological reason. The destructive urban rats are an invasive species, not native to North America. We brought them here - and I for one applaud every effort to get rid of them.

  4. Worse by Kohath · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Cats, deer, and wild horses generally won't climb walls and crawl into your house. And they don't share rats' long history of spreading disease and eating grain from storage containers. Deer are food. Horses can be tamed and used to do valuable work. Cats can be tamed and used to protect grain from rodents.

    1. Re:Worse by ItsJustAPseudonym · · Score: 5, Funny

      "Just drop a python under the house and it's taken care of."

      Good fix for a lot of things.

      Roommate takes your snacks? Python in the cupboard.
      Girl Scouts selling cookies door-to-door? Python on the porch.
      Phone solicitors? Python on the ph...no, that did not work.

    2. Re:Worse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Too many curlies in your code? Python on the computer.

  5. Rats are very clean animals. by tlambert · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Rats are very clean animals.

    Except, you know, for:

    lymphocytic choriomeningitis
    bubonic plague
    typhus
    hantavirus
    leptospirosis
    rat-bite fever (it's a real thing; look it up)
    salmonellosis
    Colorado tick fever
    cutaneous leishmaniasis ...but except for those, VERY CLEAN!

  6. Re:Not a nice way to die by cfalcon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If technologically superior aliens come here wanting earth (or whatever), I don't particularly care about how humane their human-extermination methods are. I'm more concerned about if our alien-extermination methods are effective enough to stop them, and perhaps whether or not our methods of alien-extermination are MORE effective than their methods of human-extermination.

  7. Re:Very cruel by cfalcon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No one is trying to kill your pets. Rats are filthy and violent. They destroy food, spread disease, and even hurt the animals we WANT to keep around and well cared for. Varmints are going to be killed, if you don't do that you don't even have a civilization.

    You definitely speak like someone who has never had to deal with an actual infestation, or thought much about that situation much.

  8. Re:Not a nice way to die by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 5, Informative

    Actually asphyxiation by breathing near pure CO2 isn't bad. It's remarkably swift.

    Likely better than thallium or anticoagulants like warfarin. There isn't a perfect way to kill rats, but this seems like an improvement.

    I'm not sure why they are using dry ice rather than just a tank of compressed CO2.

    Likely because the dry ice is cheaper, easier, and more effective. It also requires less equipment and training.

    Or pure N2 for that matter

    N2 is lighter than air, and you need enough of it to completely displace the air. CO2 is dense, and even denser when it is at -109F, so it will flow into the burrows. It is toxic at about 7%.

    which eliminates the stress response entirely

    I doubt if most people with a rat infestation consider this to be a critical criteria.

  9. Re:Very cruel by cfalcon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    > If there's a bug, I catch it and release it outside

    What if there's fifty bugs? What if there's a hundred bugs and a dozen mice? Someone is keeping your apartment free of bullshit parasitic creatures that spread disease and filth. It's not you, apparently, but someone is doing the fucking job out of your sight.

  10. Re:Not a nice way to die by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We better hope we don't encounter aliens that feel the same way about us and see us as pests on "their" new planet.

    What is your point? That aliens will treat us better if we are nice to rats?

    Real life is not like Star Trek.

  11. Re: Not a nice way to die by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 5, Informative

    CO2 is toxic?

    Yes. CO2 forms carbonic acid when it is dissolved in water, and acidifies the blood to lethal levels when above about 7%. With conditioning you can tolerate slightly higher levels.

    No. You're talking MONOXIDE.

    CO is much more toxic than CO2, but either can kill you.

    CO2 only deprives the air of usual ratio of oxygen, and is not notice in itself.

    No. This is wrong. If you add 7% CO2, you still have about 18% O2, which is more than enough for a healthy person. It is the CO2 that kills you, not the absence of oxygen.

  12. Re:Not a nice way to die by Beeftopia · · Score: 5, Informative

    Asphyxiation via C02 is an absolutely HORRIBLE way to die, regardless of the creature. There's a reason Carbogen (C02/Oxygen mix) is used to induce anxiety to test out anxiolytics. I mean I get that they need to solve the infestation problem but can't we choose a method that isn't also a completely inhumane method?

    This is just not true. Low concentrations of CO2 can cause distress. High concentrations are fast and painless.

    There have been lake and volcanic outgassing events which release massive amounts of CO2 and it kills people and animals where they stand, in seconds.

    See the Lake Nyos incident to see how CO2 kills.

    And here's the final report on the incident from the USGS (PDF): "In this incident, asphyxia resulted from the displacement of normal atmosphere (approximately 21 percent oxygen) by a cloud of carbon dioxide gas. Under such circumstances, victims will literally "drop in their tracks" after taking a few breaths and experience no feeling of suffocation. The actual mechanism of death is believed to be a paralysis of the respiratory centers in the brain by very high concentrations of carbon dioxide. Lethal levels of carbon dioxide are in the range of 8 to 10 percent (Sittig, 1985)." - pp. 18-19

    Also: "Additionally, many victims were found in their beds still covered by bed clothing. Victims found outside appeared to have collapsed suddenly without substantial movement. Animals were described as "dead in their tracks" in herds rather than dispersed." - page 17

    An accepted humane way to kill lab animals is with high concentrations of CO2. The key is "high concentrations."

    This concept, of dry ice generating carbon dioxide which flows down into holes at high concentrations, is actually brilliant and humane.

  13. Re:Very cruel by Immerman · · Score: 5, Interesting

    House centipedes. The grey-brown kind with lots of long thin legs.

    They're completely harmless to humans, even kinda cute for a bug, and are voracious predators against virtually all the home-infesting insects that we dislike, including termites, cockroaches and nigh-indestructible bedbugs. They can even become kind of friendly as they mature through their seven-year lifespan, if you're into befriending your "guard dogs".

    I'm not above squishing particularly annoying bugs, but fostering a population of human-benign predators is far more effective, and controls potential infestations long before you even notice you've been invaded.

    --
    --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
  14. Re:Not a nice way to die by I'm+New+Around+Here · · Score: 5, Funny

    Obviously, you've never used a MacBook in defense of your home planet.

    --
    If you think I voted for Trump because of this post, you're wrong. I voted for Dr. Jill Stein of the Green Party. Again.