Monday, August 01, 2005

Seize the cheese...

The Inner Mommy Rat / How our ratlike behavior benefits us: "Probably best not to talk about rats on national TV,' said Chris Jahnke, the media trainer I consulted last month after my book on mothers' brains started getting publicity.

I couldn't figure out how to avoid it. Rats were what had first hooked me into spending more than two years talking to scientists about the neurobiology of parenting. As a new mom struggling with a new load of mental demands, I'd noticed a report about two researchers who'd found that maternal experience improves rats' memory and learning capacity, enabling them to find hidden Froot Loops more efficiently than nonmoms.

Besides feeling buoyed by evidence that motherhood may enrich instead of devastate your brain, I resonated with that fierce emotion apparently common among mammals, the feeling that says you can no longer waste time: You've got to get back to the nest to feed the pups. In the many months that followed, I became obsessed with all signs of how rats and humans meet in matters closest to the heart.

A virgin rat, for instance, will just as soon eat or bury a newborn as nurture it -- unless that virgin has been accustomed to the presence of pups over time. That was me. It was only after a long weekend spent tending to a good friend's new baby that I was able, at age 37, to contemplate having a child of my own.

Once rats fully engage in mothering activities, scientists have found that sensory input from pups activates their brains' ancient reward circuitry, the same areas that keep us pursuing food and sex. The maternal drive, in fact, may be the strongest reward drive of all: Research shows that rat moms will more eagerly cross an electrified grid to be near their babies than will other rats, deprived of food or sex.

Quite recently, brain scans of humans have found similar neural patterns, shedding light on the mystery of how mothers manage to wake up so often in the middle of the night, ministering to what might seem to more objective eyes a mere fetid, yowling mass of life. Rodents and humans alike become passionate slaves in the service of evolution.

Mother rats also grow more fearless. Rather than hug walls, as rats are prone to do, they will boldly venture into open fields and aggressively fight off predators, much like suburban moms with whom I chanced to compete against while bidding for a house in the Bay Area.

Yet rats, as a group, like some humans, also have a capacity for empathy. When researchers used a harness to suspend a rat in the air, another rat, watching the first one flailing in distress, pressed a bar to lower him back to safety.

The rat-human parallels become more understandable when we consider, as South Carolina neuroscientist Jeffrey Lorberbaum puts it, that "the brain was not reinvented for humans." The basic architecture of rat and human brains is remarkably alike, as are the chemicals coursing through them, swaying our moods and behavior. Because of just these similarities -- plus the general lack of popular sympathy for rats that has made it so easy for researchers to, as they say, "sacrifice" rodents to dissect their brains -- rats have taught us much of what we know about basic human physiology.

In the course of my research, my sympathy for rats sharply increased, as I often caught myself feeling particularly ratlike. A whole subset of scientific studies, for instance, gauges motivation by training rats to press a bar to get a reward. New rat moms, as it has been found, will press the bar most frenetically for the reward of rat pups sliding down a shoot -- something many human mothers can identify with when they recall the smell and sounds of their own babies. With my own kids quickly approaching adolescence, I'm bar-pressing these days for a wider range of rewards. When my book first came out and friends started checking in, I caught myself hitting the enter bar on my computer with startling energy and realized I was bar-pressing for praise.

Many writers know the feeling of living with their subjects day in and day out and gradually starting to behave like them. My book on mothers' brains left me with diagrams of rat brains on my office walls -- plus two pet rats, acquired after my sons caught my enthusiasm. Observing them, it has struck me how much of what's essential in life we have in common: They close their eyes with pleasure when stroked, huddle together for warmth and companionship, and, like those French women who never get fat, savor a variety of nourishment. Yet I finally feared I'd gone overboard with this rat thing after a Washington Post reviewer wrote, "She paws through countless rat studies." (On reading that, my nose twitched with annoyance.)

Like the media trainer, the Post's reviewer hails from the East, where, as my publicist, New Yorker Holly Bemiss, noted, "We may have a different take on rats, because we see them." Over and above that, I understand the popular reluctance to embrace what is ratlike within us.

Our conceit is that we're so utterly unalike: We go to the theater, design rockets, read commercial nonfiction. What ties us together, in fact, are the things we try hardest, with all that other activity, to ignore. We're born. We live. We procreate (or not). We get sick. We die.

As parents, we're obliged, with constant fear and wonder, to face these same hard truths. We see time passing in our children's growing faces and can't then look away from the reality that we, too, are aging. Watching rats teaches and reteaches these same lessons we most need to learn. We're impermanent. Seize the day. Or at least, seize the cheese.

Butterfly Ear!


Dumbo Ears: " Dumbo Creased Ears (also known as butterfly or cauliflower ears). The ears seem to be folded back at the top with a definite crease in the middle. You can see viewed from several angles above. It’s not uncommon for a rat to only have one creased ear and the other to be one of the above types. This is seen as a fault. It doesn’t seem to be difficult to breed this ear type out by crossing the rat to dumbo lines with good ears."

Theres a butterfly on the side of your head...

Whats Ear then? Tulips


Dumbo Ears - Open Tulip Ears. These ears are being favoured by more dumbo breeders at the moment. They appear pointed but if you gently press a finger to the back of the ear, you can see that the ears will be perfectly rounded as per the ‘open ears’ above. The ear is slightly furled at the top and usually indicates the ears are in the right position on the rat’s head. The two most common faults on a dumbo rat with this type of ear is the head being too long and narrow, and the ears being too narrow and pointed and tubular rather than rounded. We are proposing to change the standard to fit this ear type in the future."

Dumbo Tulips...

Ear Today, Ear Tomorrow?!


Dumbo Ears: "
There seems to be considerable confusion about the ear types on the dumbo rats. Hopefully the following article and pictures will help demystify a little for both breeders and judges and for anyone wondering what w‘ear’ all talking about!

Open Ears (also known as saucer ears). These ears are flatter, rounded and open. These are the ears as per the dumbo standard for New Varieties currently although I don’t think are actually that favoured by the many current breeders of dumbos. Something I’ve noticed with the rats with these sorts of ears is they often have slightly too short heads or the ears are set slightly too far forward, which give the appearance of the ears being more open.

Saucer ears then...

Whats taking the US rat world by storm?


Dumbo Rats: Genetics:

What's as smart and friendly as a rattie, has the ears of an English show mouse scaled up to rattie size, is usually as calm and sweet as a sleepy rattiebaby, and is taking the US rat world by storm?"

A dumbo rat is simply a normal domestic rat, Rattus norvegicus (same species as almost all pet rats), with a mutation that enlarges and widens the ears and places them lower on the head. Somewhere along the line most of these rats appear to have been heavily selected for a docile temperament. They suffer no disadvantage due to their unusual ear set and size and slightly broader, flatter heads. In fact, their winsome sweet faces appear to be largely to their advantage when it comes to out-cute-ing the competition, whatever the species......

Now, let's lay two falsehoods to rest.

1. All dumbo rats are calm to the point of being comatose.

Incorrect. There is a TENDENCY for dumbos to be calmer than usual, but I have seen hyper ones. There's a lot of overlap between activity levels in standard-eared rats and dumbo rats. As in any variety, there are exceptions who do not follow the tendency--I have a beautiful young blue rex dumbo girl, MNM Oceana, who has always been very twitchy and fearful; fortunately her breeder socialized her carefully and I was able to build on that good foundation to establish trust with her and get her calmed down. Now she will actually step off a high ledge to my hand and run down my arm to my shoulder. She will come when I call her. But this has taken several months of daily work. On the other hand, the vast majority of dumbos I have worked with (my rattery, AristoRats, specializes in marked and siamese dumbos, so I have some experience) have been generally friendlier and sweeter/cuddlier/calmer than the standard rats I have worked with, many of whom have also been excellent.

2. Dumbo rats are deformed and should never be bred.

I guess that depends upon how you define "deformed". This could get into a whole big can of worms; let me say, though, that the simple recessive dumbo gene is in my experience less detrimental to survival of the individual rat than some other genes, such as blue (which can result in slightly smaller size), and pearl (which, when doubled up, causes smaller litters due to prenatal/postnatal mortality, pearl being a lethal gene in its homozygous state). I have observed no such disadvantages to the dumbo rat. This is one reason why I have chosen to breed dumbos--that wonderful temperament, those adorable faces, and all without any accompanying disadvantages.

Dumbo Rats A New Wave of Rattie Cuteness