Amanda Yancey - To Kill a Mockingbird
Amanda Yancey - To Kill a Mockingbird
The debate going on between cat and dog people is a never ending argument, consisting of pet owners who believe their pet is superior. However, science is showing how dogs may have the edge over cats environmentally: cats are killing a devastatingly large amount of North American birds every year.
Most cat owners probably have experienced their cats bringing in dead bird or leaving them on their doorstep. This isn’t only a gross inconvenience but it’s also disturbing bird populations and altering the food web. Cats kill on average 1.4 to 3.7 billion birds a year. Considering that there are only 10 to 20 billion North American land birds, cats are eliminating 5-15% of the bird population every year. The magnitude of bird deaths suggests that cats are causing significant declines to bird populations in some regions. Additionally, threatened and endangered wildlife species are the most susceptible to the effects of cat predation. At the rates that cats are killing birds, these birds are on the brink of collapse and possible extinction. To combat this problem where there is a large cat population close to endangered bird populations, Trap Neuter Return Colonies, or TNR colonies, are arising to help diminish the amount of bird deaths. These colonies work towards limiting feral cat populations and humanely returning the cats back to where they’re from, while also providing opportunities for these cats to be safely adopted.
In addition to birds, cats are known for also killing mammals. Cats kill an estimate of 6.7 to 20.7 billion small mammals a year, which is quite frightening when considering that the human population on Earth is around 7 billion. Many argue that cats are just working within food webs to regulate smaller mammal populations. While this is true to an extent, cats can have devastating effects on native species populations, altering the food web to an extreme.
Some may argue that cats can’t be that detrimental to the North American bird population because other things, such as windmills and buildings, also contribute to the deaths of birds. However, windmills only kill around 140,000 to 328,000 birds per year and buildings kills around 1 million birds per year. Compared to the 1.4-3.7 billion deaths attributed to cats, cats are the most detrimental force on bird populations.
Questions:
Can anything actually be done to prevent cats from killing as many birds as they currently do, considering that people have cats as pets?
Should there be more TNR colonies to help control the number of feral cats?
What other consequences do you think the death of birds creates?
Sources:
Comments
But cats are great.
Dogs too, but cats are great.
I mean it.
Fascinating!!
I have a friend in Dallas who runs a non-profit spay/neuter/release for feral cats. It's called Feral Cat Friends. They have done a lot to help control the population of feral cats in Dallas but much work and education needs to be done. I think one of the biggest issues is that people are unaware of just how many millions of cats roam free. I see people feed them thinking that they are helping out wild cats. I don't think that actually helps. If we stop them from breeding, then the numbers will go down... eventually. Question is - can we wait that long?