rachaelandrats wrote:In those pictures the animals aren't actually sitting together... pictures are taken against a blank background and put together.
I love rats and I've had over 100 of them, but you can't train them to 'get on'.
My dog has a high prey drive, I can't 'train him' to get on with my cats.
Rabbits and guinea pigs... sure they used to be kept together, people thought that was fine, but if you ask anybody who knows about either guineas or rabbits, they would reccomend you keep them completely separate at all times. I didn't say domestic rats and wild rats are completely the same. Yes a wild rat would run away from people..., but it would also kill a hamster in the wild. They are domesticated with us, but their instincts? Completely the same as in the wild. They are the exact same breed, just domesticated.
Not always, most of the time they are together because it is cheaper.
My dog is bred to be a rat dog, both his parents are rat dogs. He has learnt to live with my cat, guinea pigs and rats. He will not go near them because I have trained him not to.
Instinct can be trained against. They donut with ex-race Greyhounds so they can live with cats and other small creatures and dogs. Rats do not have a strong kill instinct, they bred it out of them when rats were domesticated to be used in labritories or they would be hard to work with.
I don't see why it is such a big deal that I training my rats to be ableto run free in my room while I have my hamster out, if anything it's a good idea because if my hamster gets out then I don't realise and let my rats out they will leave her alone.