When you buy through links on our site , we may earn an affiliate commission . Here ’s how it work .

By now , most of North America has thawed out from a brutal wintertime that introduce unhappy idiomatic expression such as " polar convolution " into the lexicon .

But some essence of the long - long-lived , subfreezing temperatures are only now becoming apparent . One surprisal was the discovery that starving rotter in New York City had attacked the Tree in urban parks for support .

rats-trees

Rich Hallett of the U.S. Forest Service examines trees damaged by rats in Queens, New York City, in April 2014.

" With the cryptic snow and the cold winter , probably they did n’t have memory access to the normal intellectual nourishment supplying and it was a raft colder this winter , " Rich Hallett , a research ecologist with the U.S. Forest Service , toldWNYC . " So they drop dead after the trees . " [ 6 Invasive Pests threaten by Cold Weather ]

The Tree — which even in winter have some carbohydrates ( mostly sucrose ) in the vascular tissue beneath their bark — had been wear away by informer all the way around the base of the trunk , a practice called " girdle " that unremarkably kills a tree .

Invasive pestis ' march halted

A caterpillar covered in parasitic wasp cocoons.

In addition to rats , a bit of other pests had a rough prison term during the winter of 2013 - 2014 , which soften records for common cold from New England to the Midwest .

" I ’m probably one of the few multitude that really root for an extremely dusty mean solar day , because I really do think it helps with some of the major insect job that we have , " Robert Venette , a biologist with the U.S. Forest Service in Minnesota , toldNPR .

Invasive insects such as the emerald ash borer ( Agrilus planipennis ) and the hemlock wooly adelgid ( genus Adelges tsugae ) , both of which have decimate native tree populations in the Northeast , may have had their Mar across America slow up or halted by extended stop of frigid weather .

A Burmese python in Florida hangs from a tree branch at dusk.

" Given that temporary have gotten really cold , and not for one Nox but for an extended period , there ’s a tendency for a tidy sum of citizenry to hope for insect mortality , " Deborah McCullough , a   professor   of entomology and forestry at Michigan State   University in East Lansing , told theCapital News Service(CNS ) .

Other invasive pests vulnerable to subzero temperatures include the southerly pine beetle ( Dendroctonus frontalis ) , the brown marmorated stinkbug ( Halyomorpha halys ) and several species of ticks ( Ixodes sp . ) , which can air Lyme disease and other illness .

Sorry , no rat Armageddon

A photo of dead trees silhouetted against the sunset

The population of Norway rats ( Rattus norvegicus ) , whose numbers are almost altogether qualified on humans for food , may drop passably this class as a result of wintry clap .

" If the C. P. Snow aim really deep , and it ’s hard for youthful scum bag to stick out across the C and get to the food , then dusty temperature might really make some mortality , " urban ecologist Steve Sullivan of the   Peggy Notebaert Nature Museumin Chicago toldFox News Chicago .

But urbanites who are hoping that last wintertime ’s unusually bitter conditions result in a rat Armageddon may be disappointed . Sullivan does n’t expect a major die - off from cold for a bad , smart animal like the informer .

Man stands holding a massive rat.

" Norway rats are a very adaptable specie , " Sullivan told Fox News .

A portrait of a man in gloves and a hat bracing for the cold.

Closeup of an Asian needle ant worker carrying prey in its mouth on a wooden surface.

A close-up of the head of a dromedary camel is shown at the Wroclaw Zoological Garden in Poland.

This still comes from a video of Julia with cubs belonging to her and her sister Jessica.

In this aerial photo from June 14, 2021, a herd of wild Asian elephants rests in Shijie Township of Yimen County, Yuxi City, southwest China�s Yunnan Province.

The pup still had its milk teeth, suggesting it was under 2 months old when it died.

Hagfish, blanket weed and opossums are just a few of the featured characters in a new field guide to slime-producing critters.

The reptile�s long tail is visible, but most of the crocodile�s body is hidden under the bulk of the elephant that crushed it to death.

An image comparing the relative sizes of our solar system�s known dwarf planets, including the newly discovered 2017 OF201

a view of a tomb with scaffolding on it

an illustration showing a large disk of material around a star

A small phallic stalagmite is encircled by a 500-year-old bracelet carved from shell with Maya-like imagery

a person holds a GLP-1 injector

A man with light skin and dark hair and beard leans back in a wooden boat, rowing with oars into the sea

an abstract illustration depicting the collision of subatomic particles