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In reply to the discussion: A New Book Called ‘Cat Wars’ Calls For Killing Free-Ranging Cats [View all]Botany
(78,339 posts)31. Feral Cats Kill Billions of Small Critters Each Year
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/feral-cats-kill-billions-of-small-critters-each-year-7814590/?no-ist
Their results paint a grim picture for wildlife. In a paper published today in Nature Communications, they write that between 1.4 to 3.7 billion birds lose their lives to cats each year in the United States. Around 33 percent of the birds killed are non-native species (read: unwelcome). Even more startlingly, between 6.9 to 20.7 billion small mammals succumb to the predators. In urban areas, most of the mammals were pesky rats and mice, though rabbit, squirrel, shrew and vole carcasses turned up in rural and suburban locations. Just under 70 percent of those deaths, the authors calculate, occur at the paws of unowned cats, a number about three times the amount domesticated kitties slay.
Cats may also be impacting reptile and amphibian populations, although calculating those figures remains difficult due to a lack of studies. Based upon data taken from Europe, Australia and New Zealand and extrapolated to fit the United States, the authors think that between 258 to 822 million reptiles and 95 to 299 million amphibians may die by cat each year nationwide, although additional research would be needed to verify those extrapolations.
Their results paint a grim picture for wildlife. In a paper published today in Nature Communications, they write that between 1.4 to 3.7 billion birds lose their lives to cats each year in the United States. Around 33 percent of the birds killed are non-native species (read: unwelcome). Even more startlingly, between 6.9 to 20.7 billion small mammals succumb to the predators. In urban areas, most of the mammals were pesky rats and mice, though rabbit, squirrel, shrew and vole carcasses turned up in rural and suburban locations. Just under 70 percent of those deaths, the authors calculate, occur at the paws of unowned cats, a number about three times the amount domesticated kitties slay.
Cats may also be impacting reptile and amphibian populations, although calculating those figures remains difficult due to a lack of studies. Based upon data taken from Europe, Australia and New Zealand and extrapolated to fit the United States, the authors think that between 258 to 822 million reptiles and 95 to 299 million amphibians may die by cat each year nationwide, although additional research would be needed to verify those extrapolations.
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I agree Feral cats have to live a really terrible life. If the book is what you say or you are
EV_Ares
Aug 2016
#2
Cats are a hammer on birds, reptiles, invertebrates, native pollinators and more critters
Botany
Aug 2016
#3
so all those dead birds were not "sentient beings" who hads no "emotional lives"? nt
msongs
Aug 2016
#4
I'm a professional ecologist with nearly 25 years experience in post-doctoral academic science...
mike_c
Aug 2016
#12
Let the cats kill as many birds as they want because birds are also dying of other causes?
Doremus
Aug 2016
#16
No more so than a 2yr old -- you wouldn't let your child go play in traffic would you?
Doremus
Sep 2016
#33
Cats know how to handle themselves on a level far advanced than a toddler
ProudToBeBlueInRhody
Sep 2016
#40
Whether or not the poster eats meat is irrevelant to the fact that it's wrong to let cats roam.
Doremus
Sep 2016
#34
I can't speak for all vegans but I can tell you about myself and how I relate to cats
Doremus
Sep 2016
#39
leash and license laws are identical, selfish cat owners are just scofflaws eom
TransitJohn
Sep 2016
#47