Anticoagulant rodenticides such as warfarin and brodifacoum are commonly used as rat poisons. These compounds work by preventing blood clotting, leading to hemorrhaging and ultimately death in rats.
Generally the bait (attractant) which varies brand-brand and usually not disclosed & the active ingredient which could be bromadiolone, diphacinone, brodifacoum or others. These 3 are in the top 10 commercial products today. They all work the same way & are considered 2d gen. First generation rodenticides being phased out due to resistance.
Yes it can, depending on the dosage. Brodifacoum, an anti-coagulent, is more potent than Warfarin, the medication sometimes used for humans. This type of poisoning needs a net typically, and will be treated with one of the K complex vitamins. Note that this toxin is pretty easily identified.
The main chemical in rat poison that is harmful to humans is typically anticoagulants like brodifacoum or warfarin. These chemicals interfere with blood clotting in rats, leading to internal bleeding. In humans, exposure to these chemicals can also cause bleeding disorders and other serious health risks.
No, rats are vertebrates. Rats have backbones.
yes and no. if u like rats and they don't bite u then rats can be trained. if u hate rats then rats can't be trained.
no rats have gills, incuding water rats
ratitoui
rats can not fart. answer rats canot be bad pets
Pet rats are not domesticated wild rats, rather, they are brown rats domesticated more than 100 years ago to now be fancy rats.
Neither. Like mice and rats, they are rodents, but they are only distantly related to mice and rats.
Super rats wear capes.