A Man And His Pet Rat Escorted Off An MBTA Bus
Well now I’ve seen everything! According to CBS Boston, a man and his pet got escorted off an MBTA bus. What kind of pet you ask? A pet RAT! You heard me right, a pet RAT!
So Transit Police were called to a T bus in Jamaica Plain last night, after a passenger brought a rat on the bus. It was on a bus in Jackson Square around 5pm. The passenger was a 56-year-old man who had his pet rat sitting on his shoulder.
Transit Police said that “other riders felt unsafe and excited.” The officer explained the T’s policy about not allowing animals on the bus to the man, and escorted him and his rat off the bus.
Here’s the tweet sent out about the incident.
12/1 at approximately 5PM a TPD officer responded to a disturbance on an #MBTA bus at Jackson Sq. A 56 year old male had his pet rat sitting on his shoulder. Other riders felt unsafe&exited. The officer explained the policy re:animals on T. The male/rat had to be escorted off.
— MBTA Transit Police (@MBTATransitPD) December 2, 2022
Why Do Giraffes Have Long Necks? Answers To 25 Animal Evolution Questions
About a billion years after the Earth formed, the first signs of life emerged. These were just single-celled microbes, but through billions of years of evolution, scientists think that one of these organisms became a common ancestor to all life, including animals.
Evolution has shaped life ever since it first emerged, progressing for more than 2 billion years before the first animals evolved from their primal ancestors. Since then, the animal kingdom has adapted to fill niches nearly everywhere on the planet, from the sea to subterranean tunnels.
Evolution encompasses the changes species undergo over long time periods. It describes how a species’ gene pool can gradually change over time, thanks to random DNA mutations or sexual reproduction introducing new genetic combinations. Traits can emerge that help individuals survive to reproduce and pass on their genes to future generations.
Nineteenth-century naturalist Charles Darwin used natural selection, or “survival of the fittest,” to describe a major aspect of evolution. According to this theory, individuals with traits better suited to the environment are more likely to survive to pass on their traits to offspring. For example, if there are a few beetles with superior camouflage in a group with other beetles that stand out, the camouflaging beetles will have a higher chance of surviving and reproducing. Over many generations, the species will adapt to their surroundings as more beetles with that camouflage trait make up the population.
Evolution is driven by interactions between genetics and nature, and the Earth’s rock layers preserve a record of this process. By studying fossilized remains, scientists can learn about how modern animals evolved.
But how these animals came to live where they live, look the way they look, and do the things they do is rarely obvious. By consulting scientific research and news articles, Stacker compiled a list of 25 animal evolution questions and answers to explain some of those mysteries, from why giraffes have such long necks to how ants can carry 50 times their body weight. Read on to find out how evolution has led to the diversity of animals on the planet.