A group of rats is called Pack.
Any rats can be pack rats. They have a habit of picking thing up and storing it away. Even people are pack rats. Some people pick things up and stores it somewhere. Then the stuff just adds up. Any rats can be pack rats. They have a habit of picking thing up and storing it away. Even people are pack rats. Some people pick things up and stores it somewhere. Then the stuff just adds up.
A group of rats is called a pack, swarm, horde or mischief. A swarm or a horde is more commonly referred to.
Coyotes and snakes.
Yes yes there is
Pack rats are primarily found in North and Central America, inhabiting a variety of habitats such as deserts, forests, and grasslands. They are known for building intricate nests made of twigs, leaves, and other materials, often in rocky crevices or beneath vegetation. Pack rats are most commonly seen in the southwestern United States.
"Pack rat" is a term used to describe anyone or anything that hordes, so needless to say, there are many differences. However, a brown rat may be a pack rat if it has a tendency to stash and save a lot of things.
Muskrats are members of the Muroidea superfamily, along with many other rodents, including most mice and rats, and are part of the Cricetidae family, which includes hamsters, lemmings, pack rats, and many others. They are not "true rats" in the sense that they do not belong to the genus Rattus.
Glue boards.
Obviously, rats have been a nuisance for many centuries, so many collective nouns have 'collected' for rats:a colony of ratsa nest of ratsa horde of ratsa mischief of ratsa pack of ratsa plague of ratsa swarm of ratsa rabble of rats
A pack.
desert