In 1972, animal behaviorist John Calhoun built a mouse paradise with beautiful buildings and limitless food. He introduced eight mice to the population. Two years later, the mice had created their own apocalypse. Here’s why.
Universe 25 was a giant box designed to be a rodent utopia. The trouble was, this utopia did not have a benevolent creator. John B. Calhoun had designed quite a few mouse environments before he got to the 25th one, and didn’t expect to be watching a happy story. Divided into “main squares” and then subdivided into levels, with ramps going up to “apartments,” the place looked great, and was always kept stocked with food, but its inhabitants were doomed from the get-go.
Universe 25 started out with eight mice, four males and four females. By day 560, the mouse population reached 2,200, and then steadily declined back down to unrecoverable extinction. At the peak population, most mice spent every living second in the company of hundreds of other mice. They gathered in the main squares, waiting to be fed and occasionally attacking each other. Few females carried pregnancies to term, and the ones that did seemed to simply forget about their babies. They’d move half their litter away from danger and forget the rest. Sometimes they’d drop and abandon a baby while they were carrying it.
The few secluded spaces housed a population Calhoun called, “the beautiful ones.” Generally guarded by one male, the females—- and few males — inside the space didn’t breed or fight or do anything but eat and groom and sleep. When the population started declining the beautiful ones were spared from violence and death, but had completely lost touch with social behaviors, including having sex or caring for their young.
This blew my mind.
On another note, I spent a week away in Croatia and Bosnia of all places. I highly recommend it.
“… this utopia did not have a benevolent creator…”
… just like Norway where they abandon their young, or Iceland that sit around in lethargic groups waiting to be fed, or Sweden who educate only half their young, or Denmark where they just lie around and groom…
Oh, wait…
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Haha, it should be a book by Orwell, but no, it’s real!
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My point is that it’s fatuous to introduce this idea of a ‘benevolent creator’ and then claim its absence is the (or ‘a’) cause of these results.
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I think that’s the reporter adding their own twist (
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Question: When someone was 30 they began drinking one to two bottles of wine per evening. Sometimes a bit more because of cocktails. How long do they have before *serious* trouble?
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Funny. In the land of Gluttony the thin man stands out. A habit is only a problem if you can’t pay for it.
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They’re ok so long as the keep the mice under control 😅
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Yes, I’ve often said, John B. Calhoun should receive a posthumous Nobel Price for predicting our current human rodent infestation of this planet.
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Human rodent lol. You reckon its doomed?
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In nature, populations always expand to the limits of the food supply. The supply of food in this “experiment” was artificially excessive and dropped the population into crazy-making territory where their natural instincts no longer served them. This was, at best, a cruel thing to do.
This had already been done with the introduction of rabbits into Australia, which had similar disastrous outcomes for the rabbits.
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And deer in urban centers and on islands and other sensitive ecosystems in Canada. Damn that Bambi meme (exists humming Every Sperm Is Say….cred …).
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Oh I couldn’t believe it when I saw it a few years ago – imagine making that now!
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Is this a Mousthusian story?
I worked at a place that had a mouse problem. We live trapped them and built a mousetown. After about 20, there were no more to catch. Until one day, a new recruit. We introduced this mouse to MouseTown and the town ate him.
(Really.)
Japan lost 1/2 million of it’s population in the last 2 years… Collapse is nigh.
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Wow. Are him?!
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“Ate him”?
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It was brutal. Total clan warfare.
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Jordon Peterson and how rats play fair.
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Wow! This blew my mind as well. Maybe the only way to avoid dystopias is to stop aiming for utopias.
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