Kill the Problem, Not the CatsIn Kanab, Utah, within sight of the white cliffs of Zion National Park, stands Best Friends Animal Sanctuary. Over 1,800 dogs, cats and other animals make their homes here, most for a short time, but some, unsuitable for adoption, will live out their lives in peace and safety in this beautiful place. One group of such "unadoptable" animals lives in WildCats Village, four buildings which are home to approximately 300 "feral" cats. Feral cats are the wild offspring of domestic cats, which were either abandoned by their owners or simply allowed to breed uncontrolled. These feral cats are not just "stray" pet cats. They are distrustful of humans and cannot usually be socialized, once they are more than a few months old. The ferals at WildCats Village will never lack for shelter, warmth, and food. Unfortunately, this situation is the exception rather than the rule because sanctuaries such as Best Friends are full to overflowing. Best Friends, for example, can take only a few new ferals each month, while receiving requests to take as many as 600 cats, both domestic and feral. So what is to be done with the other 60 million feral cats in the U.S. That's right - 60 million! Says Sally Mackler, one of the founding members of the Feral Cat Coalition, "They're not wildlife, and they're not pets, so they don't get the advantages of either group." Traditionally, the "solution" to the feral cat problem was eradication of the colony, sometimes by grossly inhumane methods. Even when more humane euthanasia is used, however, eradication simply does not work. If it did, we wouldn't have 60 million feral cats running around now. The reason eradication doesn't work is a biological phenomenon called "the vacuum effect." Whenever a number of cats are removed from an area, more cats move in and quickly breed back up to previous levels. A program that HAS proved effective, however, is what is known in cat circles as "TNR" - trap, neuter, and return. Cats are territorial creatures. An altered cat will guard his territory and his food source against new cats who try to move in, and, being altered, he will not add to the population of the colony. This method was first tried on a large cat population at Stanford University in 1989. In response to an announced plan to trap and kill approximately 500 cats on the campus, students, faculty and staff formed the Stanford Cat Network. They presented a plan to trap, neuter, release, and manage the cats; and as a result, Stanford now has a healthy population of cats holding steady at around 300. Other colleges have adopted similar programs, including Campus Cat Coalition at the University of Texas, and Friends of Campus Cats at the University of Washington.
The copyright of the article Kill the Problem, Not the Cats in Homeless Pets is owned by Sherrie Walker. Permission to republish Kill the Problem, Not the Cats in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
Articles in this Topic
Discussions in this Topic
|