No, dumbo rats are much bigger than fancy rats. They are both very nice creatures though.
This is exactly correct. All rats will test food they have never eaten before. If the rat dislikes the taste or the food is dangerous, other rats will smell the scent left behind by the rat which tells them the food is not edible. They will then leave this food alone. The same goes for food that tastes nice.
Wild rats live around houses and buildings, in towns and cities. They originally came from Europe in the 11th, 12th, and 13th centuries. They got to other places by sneaking on ships. There are 80 species of rats. There are 2 common rats which are called Norway rats: black rats and brown rats. Some other kinds of rats are: rice rats, water rats, Rio rice rats, Yucatan vesper rat, American cane rat, Peruvian rat, South American water rat, Chilean rat, Andean swamp rat, wood rat, cotton rat, Allen's wood rat, fish eating rat, white tailed rat, and a whole lot more. Both brown and black rats live in sewers, rubbish dumps, farms, and river banks. You can find them almost everywhere. Brown and black rats are very good swimmers.
There are two basic types of rats. Black/roof rats and Norway/brown rats. The brown rat, is also known as the Norway rat, house rat, gray rat, barn rat, and wharf rat, is one of the best-known and is the larger of the two. Roof rats are also called black rats and ship rats.
I don't think that rats eat each other.
because you put a boy rat with a boy rat
the ones that i know about are the guinee rat(newly discovered species), musk rat, black rat, the brown rat, dwarf rat, and the fancy rat
Fleas from rats either jump directly from rats to humans, or they jump on other animals first, or hitch onto a human from the ground or other items.
It can... just as if you were to train a pet rat to use a litter box, you would first place a small amount of it's feces in the the box so it can tell where it is supposed to "go". So technically, yes, rat feces can attract other rats.
You have to buy another rat because rats can't live alone
No, especially if they are the parent of the baby rats. Rats have been known to eat the litter when there is no other food source but at no other time. However, if the adult rat is not the parent of the litter I would still not recommend keeping them together
Rat food is for rats