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The feline killer that stalks the streets

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It is not humane treatment of animals to place a killing machine in their midst. Nor is it humane treatment of animals to allow one to live, with the knowledge that others will die painful deaths because of that act.

The damage that outdoor cats do to populations of birds and other wildlife has been documented and fretted over for a long time, and it’s always made me worry that the trap-neuter-release programs for feral cats -- cats that are genetically domesticated but that have essentially returned to being wild animals -- are inadequate. The released cat might be unable to reproduce, but it has many years ahead of it to kill birds, voles, lizards and other animals.

Now, the most comprehensive study on this subject -- large-scale, peer-reviewed, commissioned by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service -- finds that things are even worse than we’d feared. Here’s the money quote: “We estimate that free-ranging domestic cats kill 1.4–3.7 billion birds and 6.9–20.7 billion mammals annually.”

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Some of those are family pets allowed to wander, but the majority are, so to speak, homeless cats. The findings suggest that people’s willingness to let cats roam free is the single biggest source of human-caused wildlife death.

I sympathize with and appreciate the people who want to save cats’ lives -- my cat is the rescued offspring of a homeless mom -- but this can’t go on. Feral cats need to come off the streets. And we need laws for cat ownership that are similar to that for dogs: They should be licensed, spayed or neutered and not allowed to run free.

I have friends who won’t flush their already low-flush toilet regularly so they can be environmentally responsible. But they let their cat out to roam in the adjacent park from morning until just before dusk because it’s more “natural.”

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There’s nothing natural about cats as part of the local animal scene. They’re the furry, far cuter equivalent of the Burmese python in Florida, another killer of native wildlife.

I don’t like the thought of the cats being killed. Who would? But if cat lovers want to save them, they need a long-term sheltering solution, and trap-neuter-release doesn’t fit the bill. Yes, of course there might be room for neutered cats in some urban neighborhoods with rat problems. We don’t need all-or-nothing solutions. But what we have now isn’t a solution at all.

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