Do mice really like cheese?
(Image credit: JanPietruszka via Getty Images)
From “Tom and Jerry” to “The Farmer in the Dell,” pop culture is full of mice that love cheese. In fact, there’s even a mouse mascot with the food in his name: Chuck E. Cheese.
But do real mice actually crave a nutty, odorous Gruyere? Not exactly.
To start, not all mice are the same. Mice are a diverse group that make up several different genera, including Apodemus, the field mice, and Mus, or standard mice. Each mouse species is accustomed to its own habitat, like the desert pygmy mouse (opens in new tab) (Mus indutus) of southern Africa or the steppe mouse (opens in new tab) (Mus spicilegus) of Eastern Europe. But the mouse that people are most familiar with is the house mouse (Mus musculus).
The house mouse probably evolved in Central and Southern Asia, said Megan Phifer-Rixey (opens in new tab), an evolutionary biologist at Drexel University in Philadelphia who studies the species. But with the help of humans, these rodents have spread worldwide — and when it comes to food, they’re not particularly picky.
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A house mouse will eat pretty much anything that’s nearby, Phifer-Rixey said. That could include grains, insects, trash — and yes, cheese, if it’s available. But cheese is, by no means, a mouse’s favorite food, she said.
Instead, what house mice really seem to love is peanut butter. “They have a good sense of smell, and it has a pretty strong odor,” Phifer-Rixey said. Plus, peanut butter has plenty of protein and fat, which mice find attractive, she added.
Peanut butter is also recommended by many exterminators and pest-control specialists as mouse bait. Phifer-Rixey said she’s heard of some people trying to trap house mice by mixing bacon bits into the peanut butter, and for her research, she’ll add in some oats to prevent the traps from getting too sticky.
Where did this cheesy story originate?
So, if mice are…
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