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Too many rats? Birth control is one city's answer

Rats aren't just nuisances, they can carry diseases like leptospirosis and hantavirus. They are also one of the leading causes of property damage.
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iStockphoto/Getty Images
Rats aren't just nuisances, they can carry diseases like leptospirosis and hantavirus. They are also one of the leading causes of property damage.

In Somerville, Massachusetts just outside of Boston, everyone has a horror story about the rats.

Adeline Lining says they ruined Christmas for her last year. She had received a delivery of Bartlett pears.

"They were on my porch for two hours," she says. "And then my neighbor texted me a picture and was like, 'You probably don't want these anymore.' No, I don't want them anymore because there were rats inside the box feasting on my Christmas pears. They are directly responsible for ruining Christmas," she says.

Adaline Lining, of Somerville, Mass. couldn't enjoy her Christmas pears, because the rats got to them first.
Roger Moore / For NPR
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For NPR
Adaline Lining, of Somerville, Mass. couldn't enjoy her Christmas pears, because the rats got to them first.

Then there's Donine Williams who says that a couple years back, rats got under her deck, chewed through the subfloor, and nested in the insulation. "I could smell the urine and their poo," she says. "I can still smell it."

And Andrew Jefferies can't un-remember the noises he heard at his last apartment. "All night in the summer, the rats would scream" as they rifled through his trash, he says. He requested new trash cans but they chewed right through them. Matter-of-factly, he concludes "rats are crazy."

Now, the city of Somerville is trying to control these rats (and perhaps save Christmas in the process) by introducing a safer form of rodent birth control.

"I have no illusion that we can actually outsmart the rats," says Williams. "But if we could just reduce them, that would be good."

City officials agree and they've launched a field trial to evaluate the new approach.

A ratty world

Rats aren't just nuisances. They cause real problems.

"Rats can carry diseases — mostly leptospirosis [and] hantavirus," says Alicia Privett, Somerville's Environmental Health Coordinator — aka the city's rat czar. "They also are one of the leading causes of property damage."

Alicia Privett, the 'rat czar' of Somerville, Mass. has a picture of her nemesis tattooed on her arm.
Ari Daniel / For NPR
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For NPR
Alicia Privett, the 'rat czar' of Somerville, Mass. has a picture of her nemesis tattooed on her arm.

That's because they chew through wires, fencing, decks, and even cinderblock to keep their incisors trim.

In addition, rats create extensive underground tunneling. According to Sam Lipson, the Senior Director of Environmental Health in Cambridge, Mass., when the one-mile red line subway extension was built between Harvard and Porter Squares in the 1980s, the digging unearthed thousands of rat tunnels.

"You gotta admire their tenaciousness, their ability to adapt," allows Privett. Even so, she says, "they're like my ultimate nemesis."

Public servants Privett and Lipson have thrown all sorts of things at the problem, trying to keep rat numbers down and their vandalism contained. But homeowners and renters don't always follow best practices like improving sanitation and reducing the animals' shelter and food options.

Plus, the whiskered bandits outwit traps. And they penetrate supposedly impenetrable containers.

"You can try as much as you can to get rid of them and sometimes they'll still find a way 'cause they're just so scrappy," says Privett. "In my opinion, I don't think anything's rat proof."

Even attempts at poisoning can backfire when pets or birds of prey eat the rats or the bait and get sick or die.

A team of volunteers set off to examine bait boxes. The food inside is laced with a birth control chemical the animals eat.
Ari Daniel / For NPR
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For NPR
A team of volunteers set off to examine bait boxes. The food inside is laced with a birth control chemical the animals eat.

Rat birth control

For all these reasons, Somerville is trying something else — an anti-fertility chemical that targets the mature eggs in female rats.

"It basically stops the pregnancy before it starts," says Lipson, who's overseeing the field trial of the product at several sites in Cambridge and Somerville.

He says the birth control doesn't lead to permanent infertility. Rather, it acts on the rats only while it's circulating in the bloodstream. "You need to have a steady supply or diet of this in order to have an effect on the local population," says Lipson.

The goal, however, is not total eradication. "That is not going to happen," he says. The idea is if the overall population can be lowered, other efforts to minimize rat activity will be more successful.

This is why Lipson and his colleagues are testing whether this chemical, when dispensed in bait boxes in a dense and variable urban environment, might lead to less overall rat activity.

"And if we find that it does, I think we'll make that part of our city strategy," he says.

Fighting the rat-riarchy

The field trial relies on community volunteers. Privett and Dave Power — Cambridge's rat czar — lead four residents on an orientation in south Somerville. "We just appreciate the extra hands," he says.

Rat czars Dave Power of Cambridge, Mass. and Alicia Privett of Somerville, Mass. are coordinating a field trial to see if birth control can help reduce the rat population.
Ari Daniel / For NPR
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For NPR
Rat czars Dave Power of Cambridge, Mass. and Alicia Privett of Somerville, Mass. are coordinating a field trial to see if birth control can help reduce the rat population.

"I'll show y'all how to check for rodent activity in the area and on the properties," says Privett, including cut throughs under fences, telltale trails in the grass, scattered food waste, and signs of burrowing.

She walks through how to examine the bait boxes that are scattered across a handful of people's yards in this part of Somerville. "You just push in and it'll pop up," she explains.

Over the course of about a year, the city will gauge whether the approach helps.

At the very least, the volunteers will help encourage their neighbors to comply with other measures that help reduce rat numbers. "That education component is the thing that I'm looking forward to the most," says Privett.

"We really want to raise levels of knowledge and consciousness among residents and property owners," Lipson adds. "When the level of discourse around rat control goes up, we expect there to be greater awareness of doing the right thing."

Copyright 2025 NPR

Ari Daniel is a reporter for NPR's Science desk where he covers global health and development.
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