I4 2 RODENTS. 
rats that frequented the London Zoological Gardens were in the habit of regularly 
swimming to and fro across the Regent s Canal. When brought to bay, the 
ferocity with which a rat will defend itself against a human or canine foe, is 
known to most persons. When pressed by hunger, rats will, however, occasionally 
attack human beings without provocation; and it is on record that an unfortunate 
man on entering a coal-pit which had been closed for some time, was actually 
killed and devoured by a starving host of rats. 
The black rat (ill. rattus) is smaller and more elegantly built 
Black Rat. ^j ian the p r0 wn, with a longer and thinner tail; the length of the head 
and body being about 7 inches, while that of the tail varies from 8 to 9 inches. 
Its snout, moreover, is longer and more slender, projecting to a greater distance 
the black bat (§ nat. size). 
beyond the lower jaw, while its ears are considerably larger. In Europe the black 
rat, as its name implies, generally has fur of a deep bluish black colour; but in 
India and other parts of the East there are varieties, in one of which the tint is 
usually brown above and white below, while in a second the hue is rufous or 
yellowish brown, and spines are mingled with the fur. When domesticated, white 
and pied varieties are readily produced; and most of the rats thus coloured which 
are exhibited by showmen, belong to this species. In one of the Indian varieties 
the length of the head and body is not more than 5 inches, while in another it 
reaches 8 inches. 
Distribution. The black rat is very commonly spoken of as the indigenous 
and Habits. British species; this, however, is incorrect, as this rat was also intro¬ 
duced from the East, although at a much earlier date than its brown cousin. The 
exact date of its arrival in Europe cannot, however, now be determined, although 
it is known to have existed on the Continent in the thirteenth century. At the 
