Rat Infestation Takes a Toll on Nearby Coral Reefs

A study shows that by killing off seabirds on islands, rodents slash the flow of nutrients into the ocean.

Written byShawna Williams
| 1 min read
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When humans set forth on the seas to explore new lands, they often bring with them unintended stowaways: rats. If the animals gain a foothold on an island, they can devastate local fauna. And a study published yesterday (July 11) in Nature finds that the rodents’ destruction extends into the seas surrounding islands, starving the ecosystems around coral reefs of nutrients.

“The depth of this research shows just how much ecosystems impacted by invasive rats have to lose,” Holly Jones of Northern Illinois University who was not involved in the study tells The Atlantic.

In the study, researchers compared six rat-infested islands in the Indian Ocean with six nearby islands that are rat-free. Soil and plants on the rat-free islands had more of a nitrogen isotope that’s common in marine food sources, which birds commonly consume and then poop out on islands. The research team also found seabird densities were ...

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Meet the Author

  • Shawna was an editor at The Scientist from 2017 through 2022. She holds a bachelor’s degree in biochemistry from Colorado College and a graduate certificate in science communication from the University of California, Santa Cruz. Previously, she worked as a freelance editor and writer, and in the communications offices of several academic research institutions. As news director, Shawna assigned and edited news, opinion, and in-depth feature articles for the website on all aspects of the life sciences. She is based in central Washington State, and is a member of the Northwest Science Writers Association and the National Association of Science Writers.

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