Rats a Solution in Food Crisis

by Hopenow | October 28, 2008 at 12:53 pm
1171 views | 40 Recommendations | 17 comments

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The global food crisis continues to fuel food price inflation and send many into hunger and despair. Around the world, solutions are being sought to the urgent need for more and cheaper food. Right now there are 862 million undernourished people around the world (FAO), and U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has called for food production to increase 50 percent by 2030 just to meet rising demand.

The crisis is forcing many countries to turn to other food sources to feed their populations. As the price of poultry, cows, sheep,pigs and seafood rises, rodents are coming more and more into the picture, in particular, rats (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rat). For example, in Africa, farming the cane rat is seen as a better option than chickens, because they are easier to care for.

Using rats as a food source draws either disgust or amusement from many, but eating rat meat has a long history. Rats are being actively farmed and processed for food in countries as culturally diverse as Nigeria, Cambodia and India.

In Thailand, fast-food vendors are enjoying a rat boom, selling them poached, fried, grilled or baked. They claim they are tastier than other meats and are healthy because they come from rice fields.

In Cambodia, spicy rat dishes are increasingly appearing on menus as people can’t afford more expensive meats. Inflation has pushed the price of beef out of the reach of the poor. A kilogram of rat meat now sells for around 5,000 riel (US $1.22), up from 1,200 riel (US $0.29) last year.
But beef goes for 20,000 riel (US $4.88) a kilo.

“Many children are happy making some money from selling the animals to the markets, but they keep some for their family,” agriculture official Ly Marong told The Guardian newspaper. “Not only are our poor eating it, but there is also demand from Vietnamese living on the border with us.”

Cambodians have found it easier to catch rats as the rodents flee flooding in the Mekong Delta. Marong says Cambodia is exporting more than 1 tonne of live rats a day to Vietnam - a newly booming income source for the country.

In India, the secretary of the state for welfare in the state of Bihar (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bihar) has called for more rat harvesting and eating to beat the rising prices of food. Vijay Prakash sees another benefit to rat eating: killing the rats will help keep the population under control and reduce the amount of grain stocks being devoured by the voracious little eaters.

At present, over 50 percent of Bihar’s grain stock is destroyed by rats.

Practical Prakash realises he has a sales job on his hands, and is currently meeting with hotels and restaurants to include rat on the menus and make the dishes appetising.

“Some socially deprived people in Bihar have always consumed rat meat. If they can eat rats, why can’t the rest of the people?” he told India’s The Week. “This will help in mitigating the global food crisis. We are sure that it will work wonders.”

In Bihar, the traditional rat eaters are called the Musahars - a group looked down upon as ‘untouchables’ in India’s caste system of social hierarchy - who have always made their living by hunting rats in the rice paddy fields.

“We’d like to have a network with other experts to boost the rat meat business” said Prakash. “We will encourage and help the Musahars to organize rat farms in order to commercialise rat meat. The government has decided to engage the Musahars in commercialisation of rat meat for their overall development.”

Estimates place the number of Musahars at 2.3 million people, many of whom are considered the most deprived and marginalised in Indian society.

While Bihar is in the north-east of India, rat eating in the South of India has reduced the amount of chicken eaten.

In the rural south-eastern part of Bangladesh, villagers have had to turn to rats as a food source because they have done so much damage to the local crops.

Deploying hill traps during the once-in-50-years bamboo blooming season, the villagers try to stop the rats from eating the seeds. The seeds are so nutritious for the rats, it causes them to breed four times faster than normal. The growing rat population then moves on to eating the local crops of rice, ginger, turmeric and chillies.

The rats are now so plentiful, they have become a major food source.

But as is being shown in Africa, rats, and in particular, cane rats, do not have to be a meat of desperation. Large cane rats have long been eaten as bush meat - a Food and Agricultural Organization report found rat made up over 50 percent of the locally produced meat eaten in some parts of Ghana.

Now a concerted effort is underway to change the perception of cane rat and even turn it into an exportable meat.

Cameroon’s first commercial cane rat (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cane_rat) farm opened this year in the capital, Yaounde. It is meant to be a training farm to show others how to commercially raise cane rat for food. The feisty rats are very large, the size of a small dog. They are said to taste “succulent, tender, sweet.” Cameroonian rat-meat entrepreneurs are also very ambitious, telling the BBC they want to win people over to cane rat meat around the world. One day, they would like to see cane rat as an acceptable meat that can be served on airplanes and in the finest restaurants.

Pioneering work in developing techniques for breeding cane rats in captivity has been going on at the University of Ibadan in Nigeria (http://www.ui.edu.ng/) since 1973. It has been so successful, commercial large-scale rat farming is growing in Southern Nigeria.

Farmer Ade Olayiwola of Ibadan, Nigeria (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ibadan) told the Tribune Agriculture journal that cane rats are a high-profit, low-stress animal to farm.

“It is more assuring than the poultry business which could bring fortune to you in the day, but could also bring unexpected problems suddenly, to the extent that if care is not taken, one may run into serious financial crisis as well as other problems,” he said.

Resources

  • The UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization has produced guidelines and a paper on the proper care and raising of cane rats for food production. It is based on experiments conducted in the 1980s in Benin. Website: http://www.fao.org/DOCREP/U5700T/u5700T0k.htm

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recommend This comment thread is now closed
Amy Judd
Amy Judd
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 14:34 on October 28th, 2008

Hopenow, I like this story. It's good stuff.

I don't know how I feel about this to be honest. I mean, I suppose it would depend on what it tasted like, but I think in the Western world we have just come to view rats as a source of vermin and nothing else, that eating them seems out of the questions. However, if it's a matter of starving to death or eating a rat, I'd be willing to try it.

1
Jawa Lunk

If you have ever gone hungry, trust me, the taste does not matter as much as you think.

Wait about 3 days, then fry one up...you'll be licking your lips at the sweet smell of meat over an open fire.

Hunger is physically painful, and changes take place within you, and survival overrides so many of your senses.

I have eaten many types of animals in my life, including rabbit, squirrel, beaver, possum...

Your level of hunger greatly changes the actual smell and taste of whatever is set on your plate.

I would eat rat without thinking twice.


Terri Potratz
Terri Potratz
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 14:43 on October 28th, 2008

Hopenow, I like this story. It's good stuff.

If that's a rat in the above photo, that's the biggest rat I've ever laid eyes on.  I'm not surprised people would start eyeing them as a food source.

Eustaquio Santimano
Eustaquio Santimano
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 18:01 on October 28th, 2008

Hopenow, I like this story. It's good stuff.

Sanjay Jha
Sanjay Jha
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 19:11 on October 28th, 2008

Hopenow, I like this story. It's good stuff.  Yes Bihar government had mooted the controversial  project to popularise rat meat eating. But it didn't get much taker.

0
CJaye

It does not  matter how they taste it's a RAT! They sell those rats as pets in the pet store here. Big rats, very big rats as pets!

1
Jawa Lunk

Right, but you are looking at this through culturally tainted eyes...

We eat Cow in America and in other countries that is considered a terrible act.

Some countries eat Cat's and Dogs, and we think that is a terrible act.

The term pet is defined differently in different cultures...

So is the term food.

But we need to remember that if God didn't want us eating animals, He wouldn't have made them out of meat...

By the way, Horse meat is a delicacy in some countries...


1
CJaye

China King restaurant  in Buffalo NY, employees were caught butchering a dead deer inside the business ROAD KILL. They dragged the deer across the street into the restaurant. An inspector soon arrived and saw the deer being butchered in the kitchen. The inspector closed the business.

0
Jawa Lunk

I've eaten roadkill a few times...It's not bad as long as it was hit right.

Deer is very good.


panzerlawyer
panzerlawyer
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 20:44 on October 28th, 2008

Hopenow, I like this story. It's good stuff.

Blue Crush
Blue Crush
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 20:49 on October 28th, 2008

Hopenow, I like this story. It's good stuff.  Wow!  I didn't know they came that big!  I Don't think I'll be trying them anytime soon though. 

0
uttara koul

dont you think increased consumption of rat meat or any other anima's meat for that matter,would eventually lead to a decline in their population??

especially considering the fact that rats are also maximally utilised as testers in labs?

0
Iffy

The story is about domesticating and raising rats for food. Just as domesticating cows and sheep did not lead to a reduction in their population, it does not have to lead to their population decline.

0
sara star

Yummm... recipes anyone? Food is food, and I am glad it is helping the hungry.

0
Jawa Lunk

Recipes...I think anything you would use chicken in would work.

As far as I'm concerned, they are no different than rabbits or squirrels...and I eat those.

And if God didn't want us eating animals, he wouldn't have made them out of meat.

0
azzayindia

great story 

well people who have not seen big rats come to india i have seen cats afraid of those rats

1
pest control

Thanks. Very nice story

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