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Latin America
Related: About this forumPeople have abandoned hundreds of cats on a deserted Brazilian island. Officials aren't sure how to
Source: Washington Post
People have abandoned hundreds of cats on a deserted Brazilian island. Officials arent sure how to save them.
By Terrence McCoy
Foreign correspondent
June 4, 2021 at 10:47 a.m. EDT
ILHA FURTADA, Brazil Eduardo Mayhe Ferreira has heard the stories for years. There was an island off Brazils southeastern coastline that looked deserted but wasnt. Hidden within the dense tree cover were hundreds of abandoned animals.
Officially named Ilha Furtada, it was known to almost everyone as Ilha dos Gatos: Island of the Cats.
It was rumored to be dangerous to visit. The cats had grown to the size of dogs and gone feral, people said. They would attack outsiders. One Brazilian reporter, writing of the mysterious island, claimed 750 wild cats roamed its jungle; others said more. The number seemed to climb with every telling.
Now Mayhe, a municipal veterinarian in nearby Mangaratiba, was motorboating across translucent waters to see for himself. Before this city-backed expedition, he had never stepped onto the island but knew enough to understand there was a problem. One rumor was true: Over the past year, as the coronavirus pandemic devastated Brazil, the number of cats on the island had grown substantially. Two distinct colonies had formed. The cats were hundreds strong. Each day seemed to bring more and greater damage to the islands ecosystem but less agreement over what to do about it.
The island was coming into focus, an emerald hubcap atop blue waters.
Along this sun-soaked coastline, a global phenomenon is playing out. These are the pets left behind by the pandemic. The coronavirus crisis has left millions of pet owners dead or impoverished, unable to tend to their animals. In wealthy countries such as the United States, shelters and personal networks have absorbed much of the surge. But across the developing world, where shelter systems are less robust and street animals are common, a growing number of animals have simply been abandoned.
-snip-
By Terrence McCoy
Foreign correspondent
June 4, 2021 at 10:47 a.m. EDT
ILHA FURTADA, Brazil Eduardo Mayhe Ferreira has heard the stories for years. There was an island off Brazils southeastern coastline that looked deserted but wasnt. Hidden within the dense tree cover were hundreds of abandoned animals.
Officially named Ilha Furtada, it was known to almost everyone as Ilha dos Gatos: Island of the Cats.
It was rumored to be dangerous to visit. The cats had grown to the size of dogs and gone feral, people said. They would attack outsiders. One Brazilian reporter, writing of the mysterious island, claimed 750 wild cats roamed its jungle; others said more. The number seemed to climb with every telling.
Now Mayhe, a municipal veterinarian in nearby Mangaratiba, was motorboating across translucent waters to see for himself. Before this city-backed expedition, he had never stepped onto the island but knew enough to understand there was a problem. One rumor was true: Over the past year, as the coronavirus pandemic devastated Brazil, the number of cats on the island had grown substantially. Two distinct colonies had formed. The cats were hundreds strong. Each day seemed to bring more and greater damage to the islands ecosystem but less agreement over what to do about it.
The island was coming into focus, an emerald hubcap atop blue waters.
Along this sun-soaked coastline, a global phenomenon is playing out. These are the pets left behind by the pandemic. The coronavirus crisis has left millions of pet owners dead or impoverished, unable to tend to their animals. In wealthy countries such as the United States, shelters and personal networks have absorbed much of the surge. But across the developing world, where shelter systems are less robust and street animals are common, a growing number of animals have simply been abandoned.
-snip-
Read more: https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2021/06/04/coronavirus-brazil-cat-island/
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People have abandoned hundreds of cats on a deserted Brazilian island. Officials aren't sure how to (Original Post)
Eugene
Jun 2021
OP
XanaDUer2
(10,643 posts)1. This is very sad nt
Scrivener7
(50,949 posts)2. The cats look like they're in pretty good shape.
Someone in the comments section had the solution: patrols that prevent more cats from being deposited on the island until people are out of the habit of doing that, feed the cats already on the island with food containing oral contraception.