Rat poison is ripping through the food chain, threatening predators at the very top

Rat poison detected in around a third of wild mammal carnivores — including those that don't normally eat rodents, such as mountain lions and gray wolves.

A wildlife cam photo of a mountain lion prowling through the mountains
This mountain lion, known as P-47, was found dead in Southern California on March 21, 2019, with rat poison in his system. 
(Image credit: National Park Service)

Rats thrive around humans, for good reason: They feed off crops and garbage and readily adapt to many settings, from farms to the world's largest cities. To control them, people often resort to poisons. But chemicals that kill rats can also harm other animals.

The most commonly used poisons are called anticoagulant rodenticides. They work by interfering with blood clotting in animals that consume them. These enticingly flavored bait blocks are placed outside of buildings, in small black boxes that only rats and mice can enter. But the poison remains in the rodents' bodies, threatening larger animals that prey on them.

Meghan P. Keating
PhD Candidate in Wildlife and Fisheries Biology, Clemson University

Meghan Keating is a PhD candidate studying urban carnivore space use and survival. Her current work focuses on the long-term effects of human development and rodenticide use on bobcat populations in the southeastern US and globally. Her master's work focused on the ecological drivers of mule deer movement in the Mojave Desert Preserve. Meghan has also participated in research at USGS's Western Ecological Research Center looking at predator-prey interactions and space-use.