Were rats really responsible for the Black Death?

One 2022 study suggests they were not
A pandemic that killed 25 million
What caused the Black Death?
But rats didn't actually give you the plague
The nastiest thing alive
Undermining the human immune system
A clever bactria
So how did rats get blamed for causing the plague?
Spread in one of three ways
How you can get infected
Rats carried fleas
Two possibilities
Reintroduction from Asia and temporary reservoirs
Complicated science
The analysis
Less than 1% of Europe was suitable for maintaining infected rats
Questioning the rat theory
Not the first time rats have been vindicated
A similar study
One 2022 study suggests they were not

Rats have gotten a bad rap for spreading disease and destruction throughout history but they might not be to blame for one of the world's worst pandemics according to research published at the end of 2022.

A pandemic that killed 25 million

The Bubonic Plague, better known today as the Black Death, was responsible for killing an estimated 25 million people in the mid-fourteenth century according to National Geographic.

What caused the Black Death?

It was always believed that rats were responsible for spreading the Black Death but it turns out we might have been blaming the wrong mammal and that could have an important impact on how we fight future deadly pandemics. 

But rats didn't actually give you the plague

That’s right. Rats never really caused the Black Death. The real culprit that killed half of Europe was a bacterium known as Yersinia pestis, an extremely dangerous microbe that can target your body’s immune system and destroy its defenses. 

The nastiest thing alive

"Yersinia pestis is the nastiest thing alive," Dr. Olaf Schneewind told the University of Chicago's The Conversation while discussing his 2005 study on how the bacterium disables the human immune system.

Undermining the human immune system

Essentially, Yersinia pestis works to undermine its host immune system by injecting a variety of toxins into its defense cells, destroying them so the body cannot defend itself against the bacteria’s reproduction process.  

A clever bactria

"This is a very clever system for this particular kind of bacteria," Schneewind said. 

So how did rats get blamed for causing the plague?

Well, the simplest answer is that rats acted as carriers for the bacteria’s favorite host, fleas. 

Spread in one of three ways

Yersinia pestis can only be spread in one of three ways according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 

How you can get infected

In order to be infected someone must come into contact with contaminated fluid or tissue, inhale infectious droplets, or be bitten by a flea. 

Rats carried fleas

Rats carry fleas, so they were always blamed for spreading the Black Death. But a study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science in December 2022 showed that it was environmental conditions, not rats that spread Yersinia pestis to Europe.

Two possibilities

“Our study offers two possibilities,” wrote authors and scientists Samuel Cohen and Philip Slavin in a breakdown of their new research. 

Reintroduction from Asia and temporary reservoirs

“One, the plague was being reintroduced from Asian reservoirs,” the professors continued, “Second, there could have been short- or medium-term temporary reservoirs in Europe.”

Complicated science

While the science may sound complicated, it essentially boils down to environmental conditions in Europe at the time that would have prevented Yersinia pestis from surviving in Europe’s rodent population except for in small and isolated pockets. 

The analysis

“Our analyses strongly suggest that local environmental factors in Western and Central Europe, including the chemical composition of the soil, altitude, and climates, did not provide favorable conditions for persistent long-term plague reservoirs maintained by wild rodents and their ectoparasites,” the researchers wrote. 

Less than 1% of Europe was suitable for maintaining infected rats

Cohen and Philip estimated that at the time, only 0.6 percent of Europe was suitable for plague and questioned previous theories about Yersinia pestis’ spread in Europe. 

Questioning the rat theory

“We question the importance of wildlife rodents as the main hosts in Europe,” they added, concluding that the plague was probably continually reintroduced into the European population rather than carried throughout it on the backs of rats. 

Not the first time rats have been vindicated

This isn’t the first time modern researchers have questioned the theory that rats were responsible for spreading the Black Death in the fourteenth-century. 

A similar study

In 2017, a similar study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science found that it was humans, not rats, who were the main carriers of the fleas that infected Europe so quickly. 

More for you