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

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

Felis domesticus Cats are the only species to domesticate themselves Have been living outdoors in the periphery of human society for 10,000 years

Free-roaming community cats Stray cats Homeless pet cats Socialized/friendly Abandoned Lost Feral cats Untamed/evasive Born in the wild Stray cats turned wild

Control of community cats One of the most controversial issues in animal welfare Environmental concerns Public health concerns Cat welfare concerns

Millions and millions of cats 82-88 million pet cats in the U.S. (Chu JAVMA 2009) 80-85% are sterilized 10-90 million free-roaming the U.S. (Levy JAVMA 2003) ~2% are sterilized Number ~ human population 6 (Levy JAVMA 2004) unowned cats in Alachua County= 250,000 residents 6 = 41,667 cats

What is the source of overpopulation? Pet Cats 85 million Female 50% 50% Sterilization rate 85% 2% Litters/year 1.4 1.4 Live births/litter 3 3 Community cats 85 million Kittens born/year 27 million 175 million Kitten survival Live at 3 months 75% 20 million 50% 88 million Community cats = most important source of cat overpopulation

Public opinion polls 2007 telephone survey (Chu 2007 ACA Law & Policy Brief) What would you do about unowned cats in the street? 81% would leave the cats alone 14% would trap and kill the cats What if you knew the cats only lived for 2 years? 72% would still leave the cats alone 21% would trap and kill the cats

Public support of community cats Feeding unowned community cats is a common activity Alachua County FL: 12% of households fed 3.6 cats they did not own (Centonze JAVMA 2002) Santa Clara County CA: 10% of households fed 3.4 cats each (Johnson 1993 CFA) San Diego County CA: 9% of households fed 2.6 cats each (Johnson 1995) Massachusetts: 8% of households fed 3.7 cats each (Manning Anthrozoos 1992) Ohio: 26% of households fed free-roaming cats (Lord JAVMA 2008) About 50% of community cat feeders do not own cats

Historic cat control policies Ignore them Lethal control Destruction, poison, infection, hunting, trapping effective on uninhabited islands, not mainland Culling via animal shelters controls short-term nuisances but does not control population

Humane non-lethal control strategies Must have adequate scale to manage the size of the unowned cat population Safe for the environment Affordable Sustainable Acceptable to the public

Adoption option Ideal outcome for cats is adoption Problem of not enough available homes Truly feral cats are not suitable pets

Actual outcomes at animal shelters Truly feral cats often euthanized as unhealthy/untreatable using the Asilomar Accords Millions of healthy cats are euthanized in shelters every year Not enough adopters Following shelter-acquired illness To prevent potential suffering from living in the community How much does this prophylactic euthanasia cost taxpayers and animal welfare donors? Is euthanizing the vast majority of cats entering shelters compatible with the values of a humane society?

National Animal Control Association Basically the association realized that feral cats are just one portion of the cat situation... We ve addressed it as more of a community response, and with that we ve taken into consideration that the traditional methods that many communities use that simply ended up with capture and euthanize are not necessarily the ones communities are looking for today. --Mark Kumpf, NACA President NACA News Nov/Dec 2008

Sanctuary option Care for life Limited capacity Expensive Many sanctuaries also operate neuter-return programs to increase capacity Many sanctuaries are overcrowded and underresourced, leading to poor welfare

Trap-Neuter-Return (TNR) option Goals Non-lethal population reduction Healthier and safer cats Lower adverse impacts Reduced public complaints Promotes retention in the community where cats live vs. pet retention in a home

TNR core methods Live-trapping Spay/neuter Ear tipping Rabies vaccination Euthanasia of ill cats Maximize number of animals sterilized

Does TNR work?

University of Central Florida 1,415 acres 38,000 students and staff Campus authorities considered free-living cats a nuisance and conducted trap/removal campaigns Students and employees fed the cats and interfered with removal campaigns

University of Central Florida TNR started on campus in 1991 Sterilized all cats by 1995 All cats were photographed and returned to managed colonies Kittens and socialized cats were adopted New cats were promptly identified and captured for TNR No kittens born on campus after 1995 Only 4% were euthanized for debilitating conditions

University of Central Florida Population declined from 68 cats in 1996 to 11 cats in 2010 80 70 Total Campus Cat Population After TNR Number of Cats 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 (Levy JAVMA 2003)

Ocean Reef, Florida Southern Florida resort community Repeated removal of homeless cats ineffective Ocean Reef Community Association built Feral Cat Center clinic and holding area 1995-2002: 1376 community cats admitted Population has declined from ~2,000 to ~500 cats

Alachua County, FL Maddie s Fund zip code project (Levy 2010) Targeted TNR for community cats in a zip code that was the major source of cats for the county municipal shelter 2226 cats (~55% of the cats residing in the targeted zip code) TNR, adoption, and complaint mediation for 2 years Measured effect on number of cats impounded from this zip code compared to other zip codes 68% decrease in cat intake from the targeted zip code compared to 13% from other zip codes

What about rabies? Single rabies vaccination protected cats against challenge >4 years (Soulebot et al, Cornell Vet, 1981) Intervet Continuum vaccine Single dose at 12 weeks of age 100% protection from challenge at 50 months (USDA licensing trial)

What about FeLV and FIV? Consider most common source of infections FeLV: Infected mother cats to their kittens FIV: Fighting among adult tom cats Neutering reduces the most common source of infection Herd health Feral cat infection rates similar to outdoor pet cats Best use of limited resources Last year we had 35 positive cats and spent $14,000 on testing alone. Most large TNR programs no longer test for retroviruses

FeLV/FIV: 18,038 pet and feral cats Healthy cats Sick cats (Levy 2006 JAVMA)

Model 1 No sterilization No testing Model 2 Sterilize 1,000 Remove FeLV+ Model 3 Sterilize 2,000 No testing Percent FeLV+ 4% 4% 4% Adults sterilized 0 1000 2000 Adults left intact 2000 1000 0 FeLV+ euthanized 0 40 0 Adults left FeLV+ 80 40 80 Kittens born 6000 2880 0 FeLV+ kittens (75%) 180 86 0 Total FeLV+ cats 260 126 80 Mass sterilization controls both kitten births and spread of FeLV/FIV

2007: An experiment in life-saving Duval County = City of Jacksonville Largest land-mass county in US 857,000 people ~143,000 community cats Jacksonville Animal Care and Control Impounded 13,365 cats Average population of 200-300 cats in the shelter Adopted out 521cats URI rate >80% Live release rate <10%

Jacksonville Animal Care & Control 2008 Protocols were absent or insufficient in many critical areas, and the efficacy of even the best-designed protocols was undermined by a lack of training and oversight. The facility and staffing levels were grossly inadequate for the number of animals on hand at the time of the consultation, resulting in a breakdown in care that allowed substantial animal suffering, illness, and likely un-necessarily high levels of euthanasia and death, as well as creation of significant public health and safety risks for staff and shelter visitors. -- Shelter assessment report

Outcomes for cats at JACC Shelter Inventory: Cats Feline Live Release 400 2006 2007 100% 2006 2007 300 200 100 80% 60% 40% 20% 0 0%

Timeline of the Jacksonville decision to accept a feral cat program Rick DuCharme, FCNMHP, asks if ear-tipped cats from the city shelter could be given to FCNMHP and returned as part of managed populations Ebenezer Gujjarlapudi, Director of the Environmental & Compliance Department for Jacksonville, contemplates the request and determines if it s good for some why not for all and offers FCNMHP all feral cats

The Year of Big Solutions Feral Freedom, August 2008 Partnership between a nonprofit TNR group and the county municipal shelter to reduce cat intake and euthanasia Funding from Best Friends Animal Society All feral, community, and outdoor stray cats that come into JACPS are turned over to FCNMHP for TNR Targets nuisance cats in the community

How it works Citizens borrow traps from the municipal shelter Animal control officers pick up trapped cats from citizens or citizens bring them to the shelter FCNMHP picks up trapped cats twice daily for transfer to FCNMHP Spay/Neuter clinic for TNR

How it works Cats have surgery, ear tip, vaccinations, parasite treatment if needed Cats housed overnight for recovery

How it works Cats returned to trapping site the next day Educational material left at houses near trapping/release site

By the numbers 9,801 cats 517 sent to rescue 82 euthanized 829 trapped more than once 59% decrease in adult feline euthanasia and 19% for kittens at JACPS

Why rehome cats that already have a home? Feral Cats, Community Cats, Outdoor Cats Call them what you like Cats are living outdoors and doing well, they have a home Who doesn t qualify? Owner surrenders Indoor cats Declawed cats Kittens

Shelter crowd control

Saving lives Impact on Feline Live Release Rate 100 LRR (%) w/ff LRR (%) w/o LRR FF (%) w/o FF 80 Percent of Intake 60 40 20 0 JUL 07 JAN 08 JUL 08 JAN 09 JUL 09 JAN 10 JUL 10

2 years later... municipal code updated The City of Jacksonville recognizes the need for innovation in addressing the issues presented by feral, free-roaming and other community cats. T that end it recognizes that there are community care givers of cats, and acknowledges that properly managed community cats may be part of the solution to the continuing euthanasia of cats...

Community cats Community Cat means any free-roaming cat that may be cared for by one or more residents of the immediate area who is/are known or unknown; a community cat may or may not be feral. Community cats shall be distinguished from other cats by being sterilized and ear tipped; qualified community cats are exempt from licensing, stray and at-large provisions of this ordinance and may be exempt from other provisions directed toward owned animals.

Community cat management program Required Sterilization Vaccination against rabies Ear tipping If a person is providing care, cats must be fed daily and cats must not be allowed to suffer Caregiver certification program may be implemented by the city

Other progressive code updates Litters of puppies an kittens less than 6 months old without a nursing mother have no required hold period No hold period for feral animals Due to the low reclaim rate and high euthanasia rate for cats, all cats that do not have positive, traceable identification... may be sterilized immediately upon intake and placed in the adoption area as soon as 2 days after impound (but still have 6-day required hold)

Operation Catnip - University of Florida Mission statement: To reduce the population of community cats by sterilizing as many as possible

Operation Catnip Free clinic for community cats Spay/neuter FVRCP/FeLV/rabies vaccines Selamectin or ivermectin Monthly clinics 200-300 cats 5-10 veterinarians 20-30 veterinary students 20+ other volunteers Program costs $30/cat

HVHQSN High-quality, high-volume spay/neuter (HQHVSN) programs are efficient surgical initiatives that meet or exceed veterinary medical standards of care in providing accessible, targeted sterilization of large numbers of dogs and cats in order to reduce their overpopulation and subsequent euthanasia. --Veterinary Task Force to Advance High-Quality, High-Volume Spay/Neuter, 2007

HQHVSN minimum standards Procedures designed to protect individual patients and staff while attaining high levels of productivity All patients receive appropriate and professional care, regardless of their situation Safe anesthetic and surgical techniques Surgical asepsis at all times Analgesics for all patients Medical records for all patients Professionalism at all times

High-volume clinic Organized for maximum efficiency High cat numbers Minimize stress for cats Minimize cost Fixed stations Volunteers perform specific tasks Cats rotate through stations for complete care

Safety first Safety for volunteers Cats never handled awake Inject in trap so no escapes Wear gloves at all times Human rabies vaccination required Safety for cats Minimize stress Constant monitoring High medical standards Only handle when asleep

Cat check-in 8 am morning of clinic Verify registration information Verify cat has not been fed Correct container: wire traps provided by program for deposit Label traps with cat ID number Encourage donations Arrange pick up time

Waiting area 150-300 cats checked in by 10 am First in first out

Anesthesia TKX Telazol-ketamine-xylazine Small volume Rapid onset Partially reversible Inject through side of trap Buprenorphine at recovery

Cat identification Cat not removed from trap until asleep Tag placed on paw matches to tag on trap

Transporters Move the cats from station to station Allows station volunteers to maximize efficiency

Pre-surgery Penicillin injection Eye lubricant Express bladders of females Trim 3/8 off left ear tip to identify sterilized cats Scan for microchip

Neuters Standard closed castration Cryptorchid males processed like spays Previous neuter surgery confirmed by checking for spines on penis Veterinary students perform neuters after completing surgery course

Confirming previous sterilization Males Check for penile spines on intact or cryptorchid males Both testicles must be removed Females Scar, tattoo, LH testing, exploratory surgery

Spay boards Females tied to spay boards for preparation and transport

Spay preparation Midline or flank approach Hair clipped from surgical site Standard skin preparation

Spays Surgeon pace should be the limiting step of the clinic Surgeons should never wait for a cat Surgeons change gloves Assistants move cats, open packs All cats are spayed (pregnant, lactating) Veterinary students perform spays after clinical surgery rotation

Vaccines Rabies FVRCP FeLV (optional) Given according to AAFP injection sites

Medical records Medical record for each cat Complete rabies certificate

Post-surgery Selamectin for parasites SC fluids if indicated Yohimbine injection to reverse anesthesia Buprenorphine for analgesia

Instruments One pack used for each spay ($25 each purchase price) Instruments scrubbed and autoclaved between each use Packs reassembled with instruments, gauze, drape Autoclave prior to next clinic

Recovery Cats returned to clean traps before waking Constant monitoring of recovery

Discharge Recovery instructions reviewed with caretakers Emergency contact information provided Cats remain in traps overnight Returned to colony the next morning if fully recovered Lactating cats may be returned earlier

> 45,000 cats spayed and neutered since 1998

Call us! Operation Catnip Shaye Olmstead, executive director ocgainesville@gmail.com College of Veterinary Medicine Dr. Julie Levy levyjk@ufl.edu Ask for our Operation Catnip clinic manual Coming this fall: TNRprofessional.org Mentoring website for volunteer-based HQHVSN community cat clinics

Maddie s Shelter Medicine Program is underwritten by a grant from Maddie s Fund, The Pet Rescue Foundation (www.maddiesfund.org), helping to fund the creation of a no-kill nation.