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Outdoor cats easy prey for coyotes PDF Print E-mail
News: Nature
Written by ILG Staff   
Thursday, 02 July 2009 09:55

Washington, D.C. - Coyotes regularly feed on outdoor cats, according to Observations of Coyote-Cat Interactions, a by Shannon Grubbs of the University of Arizona and Paul Krausman of the University of Montana, published recently in the Journal of Wildlife Management. The researchers tracked coyotes in Tucson, Ariz., and observed 36 coyote-cat interactions, of which 19 resulted in coyotes killing cats.

Other studies have found that approximately 13 percent of a coyote's diet consists of cats. However, during this study, in the 45 instances when coyotes were observed feeding, 42 percent of the meals were cats. The researchers concluded that any cat outside is vulnerable to coyote attack and recommended that cat owners keep their cats indoors.

This finding also raises questions about Trap, Neuter and Release, or TNR, programs that catch feral cats, neuter them and release them back into the wild. American Bird Conservancy has consistently raised concerns about this practice because these cats kill hundreds of millions of birds each year and because it does not provide a humane solution for cats, a domesticated animal.

"Well-meaning but misguided Trap, Neuter and Release practitioners are creating unsafe conditions for domestic cats by releasing them back into areas where they may become prey for coyotes and other predators," said Darin Schroeder, American Bird Conservancy's Vice President of Conservation Advocacy. "Providing an all-you-can-eat buffet for coyotes is not a sensible solution and we urge states and communities to reject this inhumane approach to the feral cat problem and require responsible care of pets and the removal of feral cats from the wild."

Despite this risk of predation, the practice has been adopted in areas with large coyote populationsm including Arizona's Maricopa County

"County officials are wrong when they say TNR is an effective and humane solution," said Schroeder. "The truth is that TNR fails to eliminate cat colonies, and instead perpetuates many of the problems these colonies create, including the predation of birds and other wildlife, risks to human and wildlife health and public nuisance. Feral and free-roaming cats kill hundreds of millions of our nation's birds each year, putting additional pressure on the populations of many species that are in decline."

American Bird Conservancy recently produced a new, short film Trap, Neuter and Release: Bad for Cats, Disaster for Birds, which reveals how Trap, Neuter and Release fails to substantially reduce cat numbers despite advocates' claims, and is contributing to the deaths of millions of birds each year including endangered species.

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