Plymouth Live reports. In a video, which was afterwards shared on social media, the 27-year-old took a kettle towards the bin and began to empty the liquid.The rats started squeaking and a lid was placed over the bin.A vet with more than 35 years experience and expertise in research into rodents reviewed the footage.She said: "It is highly unlikely that they were dead at this stage, although they would have been suffering terribly.“The likelihood is that they were alive and suffering, though not moving, though we cannot be sure how long their pain and suffering would have gone on for."Humans and rats have the same basic physiology and similar organs."Both have nervous systems that work in the same way, and both react similarly to infection.
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