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Norways from Asia

jyohe Feb 25, 2009 07:25 PM

Few pests generate as many persistent myths as do pest rodents and their management. Who hasn't heard stories about "rats as big as cats," and how some rodenticides supposedly make rodents go outside to drink, or perhaps allegedly mummify them? Here are some of my favorite myths:

MYTH: SEWER RATS ARE DIFFERENT FROM WHARF RATS.

FACT: The common commensal rat goes by many nicknames, such as house, wharf, barn, sewer or brown rat. But the correct common name for Rattus norvegicus is the Norway rat. The name supposedly is derived from the fact that the first named specimens were from Norway. Actually, these animals originated in central Asia and spread throughout the world by exploration, commerce and settlement.

The other common commensal pest rat in the United States and many other countries is the roof rat, R. rattus. It's also called the black, plague or ship rat. This rat is smaller than the Norway rat and is found in warmer areas, such as in California, Texas and Florida.
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..JY

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Replies (5)

jyohe Feb 25, 2009 07:29 PM

Rodentia
Sciuridae
Woodchuck Marmota monax
Eastern Chipmunk Tamias striatus
Chipmunk
Eastern Gray Squirrel Sciurus carolinensis
Eastern Gray Squirrel, adult
Eastern Gray Squirrel, adult
Eastern Fox Squirrel Sciurus niger
Fox Squirrel in Tree
Red Squirrel Tamiasciurus hudsonicus
Southern Flying Squirrel Glaucomys volans
Southern Flying Squirrel, adult, male
Northern Flying Squirrel Glaucomys sabrinus
Cricetidae
Beaver Castor canadensis
Eastern Harvest Mouse Reithrodontomys humulis
Oldfield Mouse Peromyscus polionotus
White-footed Mouse Peromyscus leucopus
Deer Mouse Peromyscus maniculatus
Deer Mouse (golden), adult, female
Deer Mouse, female and young
Deer Mouse, female and young
Deer Mouse (golden)
Deer Mouse (gray)
Cotton Mouse Peromyscus gossypinus
Golden Mouse Peromyscus nuttalli
Golden Mouse
Golden Mouse nest
Eastern Woodrat Neotoma floridana
Rice Rat Oryzomys palustris
Hispid Cotton Rat Sigmodon hispidus
Hispid Cotton Rat
Cotton Rat Nest (exposed from under piece of metal
Southern Bog Lemming Synaptomys cooperi
Boreal Redback Vole Clethrionomys gapperi
Meadow Vole Microtus pennsylvanicus
Yellownose Vole Microtus chrotorrhinus
Pine Vole Pitymys pinetorum
Pine Vole
Pine Vole (dead)
Muskrat Ondatra zibethica
Muridae
Norway Rat Rattus norvegicus
Black Rat Rattus rattus
House Mouse Mus musculus
Zapodidae
Meadow Jumping Mouse Zapus hudsonius
Meadow Jumping Mouse (dead specimen)
Woodland Jumping Mouse Napaeozapus insignis

.......Norway rats...wow...go figure! ..LOL...
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..JY

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jyohe Feb 25, 2009 07:31 PM

Corn Snake

Taxonomy
Order: Squamata
Family: Colubridae
Genus/species: Elaphe guttata

Description
Corn snakes are slender with a length of 24 to 72 inches (61 to 182 cm). They are usually orange or brownish-yellow, with large, black-edged red blotches down the middle of the back. On the belly are alternating rows of black and white marks, resembling a checkerboard pattern. Considerable variation occurs in the coloration and patterns of individual snakes, depending on the age of the snake and the region of the country in which it is found. Hatchlings lack much of the bright coloration found on adults.

Corn snakes are primarily diurnal. They readily climb trees and enter abandoned buildings in search of prey. However, they are very secretive and spend most of their time underground prowling through rodent burrows. They also often hide under loose bark and beneath logs, rocks, and other debris during the day.

Distribution and Habitat
Corn snakes are found in the eastern United States from southern New Jersey south through Florida, west into Louisiana and parts of Kentucky. However, corn snakes are most abundant in Florida and the southeastern U.S.

Corn snakes may be found in wooded groves, rocky hillsides, meadowlands, woodlots, barns, and abandoned buildings.

Diet in the Wild
Corn snakes do not usually feed every day instead they feed every few days. Young hatchlings tend to feed on lizards and tree frogs, while adults feed on larger prey, such as mice, rats, birds, and bats. They are constrictors. First a corn snake bites the prey in order to obtain a firm grip, then it quickly wraps one or more coils of its body around the victim. The snake squeezes tightly until it suffocates the prey. Then it swallows the food whole, usually head first. However, corn snakes have also been observed swallowing small prey alive.

Zoo Diet
They are fed mice, rats, and chicks.

Reproduction
The breeding season of corn snakes is from March to May. The snakes are oviparous, depositing a clutch of ten to 30 eggs in late May to July. Eggs are laid in rotting stumps, piles of decaying vegetation, or other similar locations where there is sufficient heat and humidity to incubate them. The adult snakes do not care for the eggs. Once laid, the gestation period of the eggs is 60 to 65 days at about 82° F. The eggs hatch sometime in July through September. Hatchlings are 10 to 15 inches (25 to 38 cm) long and mature in 18 to 36 months.

Life Span
The life span of the snake is up to 23 years in captivity, but is generally much less in the wild.

Status
Corn snakes are not an endangered species. However, they are listed by the state of Florida as a Species of Special Concern because they face habitat loss and destruction in the lower Florida Keys. Corn snakes are often mistaken for copperheads and killed. They are also popular as pets. They are the most frequently bred snake species for pet purposes. However they are sometimes captured in the wild to be sold as pets. This does not seem to pose a serious threat to this species at this time.

Corn snakes help to control rodent populations that may otherwise spread disease.

Fun Facts
The name corn snake is believed to have originated from the similarity of the markings on the belly to the checkered pattern of kernels of maize or Indian corn.

They are also sometimes called the red rat snake.

Source of Information
All or part of this information was provided by the Animal Diversity Web and Museum of Zoology of the University of Michigan.
It appears here without their permission. The original author of this information was Karen Resmer
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..JY

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jyohe Feb 25, 2009 07:39 PM

Rodentia

Brown Rat....Of the several species of rodents in Florida, the subspecies of Oldfield Mouse are the biggest conservation concern, along with the Florida Mouse. Six of eight subspecies of the Oldfield mouse (commonly named Beach Mice) are in endangered status, and one is extinct. Given causes for their demise is predators like cats and red foxes and destruction of their natural habitats.[56] The Florida Mouse is on the endangered species list because of destruction of their habitat. The mouse is the only mammal that lives only in Florida. The rodent depends on the Gopher Tortoise(also endangered) for its survival, because it makes his burrows from Tortoises burrows, or in absence of those Oldfield mouse burrows. [57]

Non-native species brought in boats by colonizers are the House Mouse, Brown Rat and the Black Rat. Other non-natives are the Capybara, the Nutria and the Mexican Gray Squirrel. [58]

Not listed below, but with reported sightings, are the biggest rat in the world, the Gambian Pouch Rat, which arrived in 2002; and the Prairie Dog. Both are wild releases of animals kept as pets.[58]
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..........
....brown rat is Norway rat
...seems to be here too.......

.......Google....gotta use it....

.....I'm done....it's all just a click away....

....Thanxx.....breed them now....well...as soon as the females shed.....should be about a week away here....

so....have fun...see you all at Hamburg this week?...say HEY ...!...

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..JY

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Brewster320 Feb 25, 2009 09:03 PM

There are feral capybara in Florida?! You learn something new every day I guess.

jyohe Feb 26, 2009 07:53 PM

and Gambian pouched rats....I thought wow....

hate to be trapping muskrats and find those 2 looking at me...drowning wires might come up a little short or light...LOL.....plan on BIG rats....even big nutrias....

and eat three of the four....not sure if I could eat the Gambian...actually...I know I couldn't....I've seen them in person.....sneaky buggers.....waited and watched...looking for a figer to eat....I didn't stick it in the cage....

the Capybara....now that would be a big enough meal.....!...(like beaver...but they taste too much like beef I think..)....

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..JY

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