RATSENSE - Super smart heroes??
Along with chimpanzees, bottlenose dolphins, elephants, dogs, pigs, pigeons and octopuses, rats are considered by experts to be one of the smartest species on the planet. Scientists have discovered that rats, just like us, can make decisions based on what they do or do not know – something called metacognition – essentially the ability to think about thinking. This means, like humans, they can make decisions based on what they do or do not know.
In fact, the latest scientific findings could change our opinions of rats forever and highlight why they make such fantastic pets who recognize their owners, respond to their sight and voice and love to spend time hanging out with them. They also have a whole host of other talents.
So, just how intelligent are rats? According to PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals), rats are: “Natural students who excel at learning and understanding concepts. Rats are considerably smaller than dogs, but they are at least as capable of thinking about things and figuring them out as dogs are. And, while rats are much smaller than elephants, they have excellent memories.”
American veterinarian and rat advocate Dr Karen Becker states: “Studies also show that rats are surprisingly self-aware, they're ticklish, and they dream just as we do. Pet rats are extremely social and form strong bonds with their owners. They learn their names and come when they're called, and they beg for time out of their cage to play and interact with their owners.”
And, like people, rats laugh when they’re happy, as neuroscientist Jaak Panksepp discovered in the 1990s, using a bat detector to make their ultrasonic chirps audible. Rats laugh when they play with each other and when they’re tickled. Laughing rats playfully seek tickling from people just like dogs urge their human to play.
Erin Stromberg, a keeper at Think Tank , an exhibit that highlights animal cognition at the Smithsonian National Zoo in Washington DC, points to some recent science that demonstrates rats' amazing capacity for empathy and compassion – qualities that are not often attributed to animals other than humans: "When given the choice, rats chose to free other caged animals rather than take a food reward."
Rats are also using their specialist skills to help humans. Erin Stromberg says: “People think of dogs having ‘expert’ noses, but rats’ sense of smell is even more sensitive than that of dogs. In Africa, the APOPO HeroRat non-profit organisation trains Gambian pouched rats to detect land mines that have not been detonated. That program was so successful that they have expanded it; now, they’re also training rats to identify communicable diseases, such as tuberculosis (TB). For every one they identify correctly, they get a food reward.”
The rats’ success rate is astonishing. The APOPO organisation reports that TB detection rats are at least as accurate as conventional routine microscopy, but up to 20 times faster. The mine-detection rats can search 200 square metres in one hour – with a metal detector this would take two to four days.
So, if you want some pocket-size pets who are smart, clean, empathetic, affectionate and all-round super-heroes, it could be time to join the rat pack!