Fact vs. fiction: What every wildlife professional should know about free-roaming cats

Similar documents
CASE STUDIES. Trap-Neuter-Return Effectively Stabilizes and Reduces Feral Cat Populations

The Feral Cats Task Force Resources

PRESSING ISSUES ACTION PLAN. Completed by Pressing Issues Working Group for the Idaho Bird Conservation Partnership September 2013

How To Bust Myths About Community Cats With Science October 22, 2015

Animal Care Expo Return to Field. Bryan Kortis

The domestic cat (Felis catus) has played a vital role in human lives for centuries.

Outline 1/13/15. Range is mostly surrounding Puerto Rico Important for Tourism and ecological balance

MEET THE PLAYERS PUBLIC HEALTH DEPARTMENTS APPROVAL OF TNR

A Case Study of the Effectiveness of TNR on a Feral Cat Colony

Free-roaming community cats

Companion Animals & Conservation A Community Solution

A New Approach to Saving Cats?

MANAGING CAT COLONIES. Dr. Julie Levy

No Frill No Kill: A New Approach to Saving Cats?

Community Cats and the Ecosystem

Spay/Neuter. Featured Resource. Resources Like This: Animal transport guidelines Read more about this resource»

Lawrence City Code KATIE BRAY BARNETT, ANIMAL WELFARE COUNSEL KATE MEGHJI, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR

2017 ANIMAL SHELTER STATISTICS

RAISING THE BAR: BRINGINGTNR PROGRAMS FROM ZERO TO HERO

Alice Burton. Benefits of a Community, Animal Control, and Shelter Supported TNR Program. Presented by

Transforming Shelters to Save More Cats: Activist Toolkit

Kate F. Hurley, DVM, MPVM Koret Shelter Medicine Program Director Center for Companion Animal Health University of California, Davis

Offering a Humane Solution to Feline Overpopulation LOCATED IN HAMILTON, MONTANA

A Municipal Approach to a Trap, Neuter, Vaccinate & Manage Program. Presented by Geoffrey Goyette Career Development Institute

Managing cats scientifically & humanely to decrease cats (& costs)

Fact Sheet WHY TRAP-NEUTER-RETURN FERAL CATS? THE CASE FOR TNR. Research. What is Trap-Neuter-Return? Trap-Neuter-Return Stabilizes Feral Cat Colonies

Total Funding Requested: $25, Pasco County Board of County Commissioners

COMBATING THE NAYSAYERS: WHO SAYS THERE S NO PROOF TNR WORKS?

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

The Cat Conundrum Tens of millions of free-roaming felines take a huge toll on wildlife; what to do about them has spawned battles from coast to coast

What is targeting? Focusing limited resources in a geographic area of high need in order to maximize impact.

SAVING COMMUNITY CATS: Case studies from the real world. Julie Levy, Maddie s Shelter Medicine Program Shaye Olmstead, Operation Catnip

Oil Spill Impacts on Sea Turtles

Truly Targeted Spay/Neuter

Alice Burton. Benefits of a Community, Animal Control, and Shelter Supported TNR Program. Presented by

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS STATE OF GEORGIA

ORDINANCE NO AN ORDINANCE TO AMEND CHAPTER 7.05 OF THE SPEEDWAY MUNICIPAL CODE REGARDING ANIMALS

Persuading Municipal Officials to Go With TNR

Talking to Your Community About Cats

Feral and Stray Dog Population Management

Free-Roaming Cats and Nonsurgical Sterilization

Chapter relating to feral cats Feral Cats

CITY OF DELAND FLORIDA REQUEST FOR COMMISSION ACTION. May X Forms for establishing the program Animal Control to Provide for a Cat

Photo courtesy of PetSmart Charities, Inc., and Sherrie Buzby Photography. Community Cat Programs Handbook. CCP Operations: Intake of Cats and Kittens

PROJECT CATSNIP IN PALM BEACH COUNTY COUNTDOWN TO ZERO

Fertility control to mitigate humanwildlife conflicts in an overcrowded world : an overview

Recognizing that the government of Mexico lists the loggerhead as in danger of extinction ; and

ALUMNI - Austin TX partners - Live Release Rate -- Year over Year

2017 ANNUAL REPORT. Computer Consultant: Christina Frantom

Jacksonville Animal Care and Protective Services

Feral Freedom. FERAL FREEDOM: Keeping community cats out of shelters

Madison, Georgia. CODE OF ORDINANCES ch. 14, art. XII, to ARTICLE XII. MANAGED CARE OF FERAL CATS. Sec Definitions.

A Report on Trap/Alter/Release Programs (c) By Karen Johnson

U.S. Public Opinion on Humane Treatment of Stray Cats

Stray dog: means any dog not under direct control by a person or not prevented from roaming.

Animal Shelter Update

US Public Opinion on Humane Treatment of Stray Cats

Targeted TNR: Making an Impact

November 6, Introduction

Island Fox Update 2011

PURR-fecting the Impact of TNR: Creating a community cat program that works. Bethany Heins City of San Antonio Animal Care Services


ADVOCACY TOOLKIT HOW TO ADVOCATE FOR HUMANE POLICIES FOR CATS IN YOUR COMMUNITY

Winnebago County Animal Services

WHY DO THEY EXIST HOW TO MANAGE THEM CONFLICT RESOLUTION

Allen County SPCA Working Cat Program

SUMMARY OF FINDINGS AND RECOMMENDATIONS. Identifying Best Practice Domestic Cat Management in Australia

AnimalShelterStatistics

Paradigm Shift in Cat Management in the Shelter & Community

SEA TURTLES ARE AFFECTED BY PLASTIC SOFIA GIRALDO SANCHEZ AMALIA VALLEJO RAMIREZ ISABELLA SALAZAR MESA. Miss Alejandra Gómez

State: Florida Zip: Phone (xxx xxx xxxx): Fax: Dates of Last Fiscal Year: Begin: 01/01/15 End: 12/31/15

Coexisting with Coyotes: Celebrating the Marin Coyote Coalition

Cat Survey Key Findings Report. Released March 2014 Multnomah County Animal Services

Winnebago County Animal Services

Presentation on the Benefits of a TNR (Trap, Neuter, Return) Program. for the Management of Free-roaming Cats

Re: Improving protection measures for Maui s and Hector s dolphins

American Samoa Sea Turtles

SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL STAFF REPORT

Total Funding Requested: $25, Putnam County Board of County Commissioners.

Hawke s Bay Regional Predator Control Technical Protocol (PN 4970)

BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS AGENDA ITEM SUMMARY

Mute Swans. Invading Michigan s Waters. A growing threat to native animals, habitat, and humans. Photo by Jessie Turner

Grant ID: 220. Application Information. Demographics.

Feral Cat Management: Perceptions and Preferences (A Case Study)

Model Community Cat Ordinance

Memorandum in SUPPORT

SPCA Serving Erie County and Feral Cat FOCUS: Working Together to Help Feral Cats

TORONTO S FERAL CATS TODAY. TorontoFeralCatCoalition.ca

Article An Examination of an Iconic Trap-Neuter-Return Program: The Newburyport, Massachusetts Case Study

ASSEMBLY BILL No. 2343

Report to Pompano Beach City Commissioners: The Science of Feral Cats. Grant Sizemore American Bird Conservancy

Shelter Crowd Control: Keeping Community Cats out of Shelters

Person Submitting Proposal: Tamera DeMello

Organization Business Address: 965 Pondella Rd. State: Florida Zip: Phone (xxx xxx xxxx): Fax:

Florida Community Cat Act: A Humane Approach to Managing Free-Roaming Cats H 1121/S 1320

An Effective Strategy for the Humane Reduction of the Feral and Stray Cat Population in Edmonton. Trap Neuter Return

Keeping community cats out of shelters. JULIE LEVY, DVM, PHD, DACVIM Maddie s Shelter Medicine Program University of Florida

Public Perceptions of Domestic Cats and Preferences for Feral Cat Management in the Southeastern United States

Reducing Homeless Cat Populations on Kauai Compassionate Approaches are Working Better

NACA NEWS. Be the Solution

Transcription:

Fact vs. fiction: What every wildlife professional should know about free-roaming cats Trap-neuter-return (TNR) is a common-sense, cost-effective solution for managing populations of unowned, free-roaming cats (sometimes called stray, feral, or community cats ) by preventing additional births rather than trying to round up, house, feed, and kill more cats. Despite TNR becoming increasingly popular over the past 25 years, a great deal of misinformation exists regarding TNR, and outdoor cats in general. To understand how TNR aligns with conservation interests, you need to know the facts. Fiction: TNR doesn t work. The science is quite clear: There are only two ways proven to reduce, and eventually eliminate, a population of free-roaming cats: (1) intensive TNR efforts or (2) intensive eradication efforts, such as those done using poison, disease, lethal trapping, and hunting on small oceanic islands.1,2 Given the horrendous methods employed and costs that can exceed $100,000 per square mile3 eradication is a non-starter in the U.S. The only fiscally sound option, then, is TNR. Arguments about the limitations of its effectiveness, the alleged impact of outdoor cats on the environment and so forth largely miss the point. In the vast majority of instances, TNR is simply the best option available to humanely reduce the outdoor cat population. Fiction: TNR poses a threat to wildlife, especially native birds. The mortality estimates sometimes attributed to free-roaming cats4 simply cannot be reconciled with the best population estimates available,5 or with the population trends documented by the annual North American Breeding Bird Survey.6 In addition, such estimates leave no accounting for other well-documented causes of bird mortality, such as pesticide use, oil spills, habitat loss, window strikes, or other anthropogenic causes. Indeed, were these claims even remotely accurate, no birds would be left. It s well known to biologists that all predators cats included tend to prey on the young, the old, the weak and the unhealthy. At least two studies have investigated this phenomenon in detail, revealing that birds killed by cats are, on average, significantly less healthy than birds killed through non-predatory events (e.g., collisions with windows or cars).7,8 As the U.K. s Royal Society for the Protection of Birds notes: It is likely that most of the birds killed by cats would have died anyway from other causes before the next breeding season, so cats are unlikely to have a major impact on populations. 9 In any case, because the most effective way to reduce most populations of community cats is through sterilization, TNR offers a benefit to wildlife as well. 1

Fiction: TNR doesn t eliminate the population of unowned, free-roaming cats. Elimination of a particular population of cats can be quite difficult, as even the most intensive eradication programs have demonstrated. Complete elimination can also backfire when, for example, the population of an island s rodents skyrockets threatening the very wildlife whose protection prompted the eradication campaign. 10,11 Nevertheless, a number of TNR programs have demonstrated dramatic population reductions and, in some cases, have completely eliminated colonies of free-roaming cats. Among the most well-documented examples: a In Florida, a campus TNR program led to the adoption of 47 percent of the 155 cats living on campus over an 11-year observation period at the end of which, just 23 cats remained on campus. 12 In Rome, Italy, a survey of caretakers (caring for 103 cat colonies) revealed a 22 percent decrease overall in the number of cats, despite a 21 percent rate of cat immigration. Although some colonies experienced initial increases, the numbers began to decrease significantly after three years of TNR. From a report on the survey: Colonies neutered three, four, five or six years before the survey showed progressive decreases of 16, 29, 28 and 32 percent, respectively. 13 A recent survey conducted among 28 respondents involved with TNR efforts in Australia (with usable data from a total of 42 colonies) revealed a median decline in colony size from 11.5 to 6.5 cats over a median of 2.2 years, and the median reduction was 31 percent; this was achieved by rehoming cats and kittens and reducing reproduction. 14 A 17-year TNR effort on the waterfront in Newburyport, Massachusetts, resulted in the elimination of an estimated 300 cats. 15 In Chicago, Illinois, a citizen scientist implementing a targeted TNR program documented a mean population reduction (across 20 colonies) of 54 percent from entry levels and 82 percent from peak levels. 16 Fiction: TNR programs establish colonies of cats. TNR is a response to the presence of one or more cats in a given area. Relocating cats is done only rarely (as it is labor-intensive) and such cases generally involve integrating cats with no opportunity to be returned to their original location (e.g., because a property is being demolished) into existing colonies (e.g., via a barn cat program). Best Friends does not support the maintenance of colonies in environmentally sensitive habitat or habitat where threatened and endangered prey species are present. To address concerns over colonies in wildlife-sensitive areas, we recommend a policy similar to what has been proposed in Burlington County, New Jersey. As part of a progressive pilot program designed by the New Jersey Feral Cat & Wildlife Coalition, colonies (and feeding) are permitted without limitation in parks and open spaces not considered wildlife-related. In areas that are considered wildlife-related, colonies are also permitted, but the colony sponsor is required to secure the permission of the land manager. 17 a For additional information, visit bestfriends.org/resources/feral-cats-and-tnr for resources such as Trap-Neuter-Return Success Stories: What the Research Tells Us. 2

Such a policy provides a reasonable balance between the concerns of conservationists and those of community cat advocates and also recognizes the real-world challenges associated with attempts to enforce a colony ban on all public lands, given the limited resources available for such efforts. Fiction: TNR increases the risk of rabies transmission to humans, domestic animals, and wildlife. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reports: Over the last 100 years, rabies in the United States has changed dramatically. More than 90 percent of all animal cases reported annually now occur in wildlife. 18 Vaccination against rabies is common practice for TNR programs in the U.S., especially in parts of the country where rabies in cats occurs most frequently. b In fact, a 2012 nationwide survey of feral cat groups conducted by Alley Cat Rescue revealed that 96 percent of the groups provide rabies vaccinations as part of their TNR programs. 19 TNR therefore protects public health by creating a powerful Figure 1. Achieving herd immunity. Adapted from Jekel, J. F. Epidemiology, Biostatistics, and Preventive Medicine. 3rd ed., 2007. barrier between wildlife and humans. And not every cat needs to be vaccinated to achieve herd immunity 20 (Figure 1). The public health benefit of TNR is therefore two-fold: The cats are vaccinated, and their numbers are reduced over time. Fiction: TNR doesn t reduce the spread of toxoplasmosis to wildlife. Research has shown that cats living in close proximity to humans typical of TNR cats are much less likely to be exposed to the Toxoplasma gondii parasite than solitary, feral domestic cats living in undeveloped landscapes. 21 Feeding community cats common practice even where robust TNR programs don t exist therefore seems to be an effective measure for reducing the spread of toxoplasmosis in cats, humans, and wildlife. Of course, an active, targeted TNR program would likely reduce the population of community cats, further reducing the risks. Fiction: Outdoor cats are responsible for the decline of various marine mammal populations caused by T. gondii-contaminated rainwater runoff. The majority of California sea otter mortalities often attributed to cats 22 were actually the result of a strain of T. gondii found almost exclusively in wild felids and only rarely in domestic cats. 23,24 Indeed, research from the U.S. Geological Survey concluded that spillover from wildlife, not pets is likely responsible for infection in California sea otters. 25 b Best Friends recommends that vaccination against rabies be included in all TNR programs, and that reasonable attempts are made to assure boosters are also administered. 3

And the agency s most recent census found that the otter population is likely at its highest level in at least 100 years. 26,27 A similar scenario has played out in Hawaii, with cats blamed for declining numbers of the endangered Hawaiian monk seal. However, an examination of the evidence reveals a very different story. According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, T. gondii has been implicated in the deaths of eight seals over a 15-year period just 4.4 percent of mortalities overall. 28 And a 2016 report from the agency notes that there have been an increasing number of seal sightings and births in the main Hawaiian Islands since 1990 just where one would expect the risk of toxoplasmosis to be greatest (since these are the most densely populated of the Hawaiian Islands, and therefore home to more cats). 29 Again, targeted TNR would likely reduce the population of cats in the environment, further reducing any risks of environmental contamination. Fiction: Most people are opposed to TNR for managing the unowned, free-roaming cats in their neighborhood. Results of a 2014 national survey commissioned by Best Friends revealed a 68 percent preference for TNR over impoundment followed by lethal injection of unadoptable cats (24 percent). 30 More recently, a 2017 survey (also commissioned by Best Friends) found nearly identical results: 72 percent of respondents supported TNR, compared to just 18 percent favoring impoundment and lethal injection. Results of a 2006 survey commissioned by Alley Cat Allies found that 81 percent of respondents thought leaving [a] cat where it is outside was more humane for the cat, compared to the alternative of having the cat caught and then put down (14 percent). 31 When respondents were asked the same question but told to assume the cat would die two years later after being hit by a car the support for leaving the cat remained strong, at 72 percent (with 21 percent preferring to have the cat caught and euthanized). The same questions were asked in two subsequent surveys, and the results again indicated a strong preference (e.g., 73 86 percent of respondents for the first question) for leaving the cat where it is outside. 32,33 Such attitudes are in line with the results of a 2011 national survey in which just 25 percent of respondents agreed that animal shelters should be allowed to euthanize animals as a necessary way of controlling the population of animals. 34 Literature cited (1) Bester, M. N.; Bloomer, J. P.; Aarde, R. J. van; Erasmus, B. H.; Rensburg, P. J. J. van; Skinner, J. D.; Howell, P. G.; Naude, T. W. A Review of the Successful Eradication of Feral Cats from Sub-Antarctic Marion Island, Southern Indian Ocean. South African Journal of Wildlife Research 2002, 32 (1), 65 73. (2) Ratcliffe, N.; Bell, M.; Pelembe, T.; Boyle, D.; Benjamin, R.; White, R.; Godley, B.; Stevenson, J.; Sanders, S. The Eradication of Feral Cats from Ascension Island and Its Subsequent Recolonization by Seabirds. Oryx 2009, 44 (01), 20 29. (3) Campbell, K. J.; Harper, G.; Algar, D.; Hanson, C. C.; Keitt, B. S.; Robinson, S. Review of Feral Cat Eradications on Islands. In Island invasives: eradication and management; Veitch, C. R., Clout, M. N., Towns, D. R., Eds.; IUCN: Gland, Switzerland, 2011. (4) Loss, S. R.; Will, T.; Marra, P. P. The Impact of Free-Ranging Domestic Cats on Wildlife of the United States. Nature Communications 2013, 4. (5) Partners in Flight Science Committee 2013. PIF Population Estimates Database pif.birdconservancy.org/popestimates/ (accessed Mar 5, 2018). 4

(6) Sauer, J. R.; Niven, D. K.; Hines, J. E.; Ziolkowski, D. J. J.; Pardieck, K. L.; Fallon, J. E.; Link, W. A. The North American Breeding Bird Survey, Results and Analysis 1966 2015. Version 2.07.2017; USGS Patuxent Wildlife Research Center, Laurel, MD, 2017. (7) Møller, A. P.; Erritzøe, J. Predation against Birds with Low Immunocompetence. Oecologia 2000, 122 (4), 500 504. (8) Baker, P. J.; Molony, S. E.; Stone, E.; Cuthill, I. C.; Harris, S. Cats about Town: Is Predation by Free- Ranging Pet Cats Felis Catus Likely to Affect Urban Bird Populations? Ibis 2008, 150, 86 99. (9) RSPB. Are Cats Causing Bird Declines? 2016. (10) Carnie, T. Killer Mice Wreak Havoc on Marion Island. IOL News. 2015. (11) Bergstrom, D. M.; Lucieer, A.; Kiefer, K.; Wasley, J.; Belbin, L.; Pedersen, T. K.; Chown, S. L. Indirect Effects of Invasive Species Removal Devastate World Heritage Island. Journal of Applied Ecology 2009, 46 (1), 73 81. (12) Levy, J. K.; Gale, D. W.; Gale, L. A. Evaluation of the Effect of a Long-Term Trap-Neuter-Return and Adoption Program on a Free-Roaming Cat Population. Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association 2003, 222 (1), 42 46. (13) Natoli, E.; Maragliano, L.; Cariola, G.; Faini, A.; Bonanni, R.; Cafazzo, S.; Fantini, C. Management of Feral Domestic Cats in the Urban Environment of Rome (Italy). Preventive Veterinary Medicine 2006, 77 (3 4), 180 185. (14) Tan, K.; Rand, J.; Morton, J. Trap-Neuter-Return Activities in Urban Stray Cat Colonies in Australia. Animals 2017, 7 (6), 46. (15) Spehar, D. D.; Wolf, P. J. An Examination of an Iconic Trap-Neuter-Return Program: The Newburyport, Massachusetts Case Study. Animals 2017, 7 (11). (16) Spehar, D. D.; Wolf, P. J. A Case Study in Citizen Science: The Effectiveness of a Trap-Neuter-Return Program in a Chicago Neighborhood. Animals 2018, 7 (11). (17) n.a. Pilot Program: Ordinance & Protocols for the Management of Feral Cat Colonies in Wildlife- Sensitive Areas in Burlington County, New Jersey; New Jersey Feral Cat & Wildlife Coalition, 2007; p 17. (18) CDC. Rabies in the U.S.: Public Health Importance of Rabies. 2011. (19) ACR. Alley Cat Rescue s National Feral Cat Survey. PR Newswire 2012. (20) Jekel, J. F. Epidemiology, Biostatistics, and Preventive Medicine, 3rd ed.; Elsevier Health Sciences, 2007. (21) VanWormer, E.; Conrad, P.; Miller, M.; Melli, A.; Carpenter, T.; Mazet, J. K. Toxoplasma Gondii, Source to Sea: Higher Contribution of Domestic Felids to Terrestrial Parasite Loading Despite Lower Infection Prevalence. EcoHealth 2013, 1 13. (22) Jessup, D. A.; Miller, M. A. The Trickle-Down Effect. The Wildlife Professional 2011, 5 (1), 62 64. (23) Conrad, P. A.; Miller, M. A.; Kreuder, C.; James, E. R.; Mazet, J.; Dabritz, H.; Jessup, D. A.; Gulland, F.; Grigg, M. E. Transmission of Toxoplasma: Clues from the Study of Sea Otters as Sentinels of Toxoplasma Gondii Flow into the Marine Environment. International Journal for Parasitology 2005, 35 (11 12), 1155 1168. (24) Miller, M. A.; Miller, W. A.; Conrad, P. A.; James, E. R.; Melli, A. C.; Leutenegger, C. M.; Dabritz, H. A.; Packham, A. E.; Paradies, D.; Harris, M.; et al. Type X Toxoplasma Gondii in a Wild Mussel and Terrestrial Carnivores from Coastal California: New Linkages between Terrestrial Mammals, Runoff and Toxoplasmosis of Sea Otters. International Journal for Parasitology 2008, 38 (11), 1319 1328. (25) Lafferty, K. D. Sea Otter Health: Challenging a Pet Hypothesis. International Journal for Parasitology: Parasites and Wildlife 2015, 4 (3), 291 294. (26) Tinker, M. T.; Hatfield, B. B. California Sea Otter (Enhydra Lutris Nereis) Census Results, Spring 2016; U.S. Geological Survey Data Series 1018, 2016; p 10. (27) Rogers, P. California Sea Otter Population Reaches Record High Number. The Mercury News. September 19, 2016. (28) Barbieri, M. M.; Kashinsky, L.; Rotstein, D. S.; Colegrove, K. M.; Haman, K. H.; Magargal, S. L.; Sweeny, A. R.; Kaufman, A. C.; Grigg, M. E.; Littnan, C. L. Protozoal-Related Mortalities in Endangered Hawaiian Monk Seals Neomonachus Schauinslandi. Diseases of aquatic organisms 2016, 121 (2), 85 95. (29) Sprague, R. S.; Walters, J. S.; Baron-Taltre, B.; Davis, N. Main Hawaiian Islands Monk Seal Management Plan; National Marine Fisheries Service, Pacific Islands Region: Honolulu, HI, 2016. (30) Wolf, P. J. New Survey Reveals Widespread Support for Trap-Neuter-Return. Humane Thinking 2015. (31) Chu, K.; Anderson, W. M. Law & Policy Brief: U.S. Public Opinion on Humane Treatment of Stray Cats; Alley Cat Allies: Bethesda, MD, 2007. (32) Beall, A. E. Community Cats: A Journey into the World of Feral Cats; iuniverse, 2014. (33) Robinson, B. Letter: How to Manage Green Bay s Feral Cats. Green Bay Press Gazette. Jan. 25, 2018. (34) Karpusiewicz, R. AP-Petside.Com Poll: Americans Favor No-Kill Animal Shelters. 2012. 5