Keeping Cats Indoors
Isn't just for the Birds!
Each year, millions of
cats are run over by cars, mauled by dogs,
poisoned and lost. Hundreds of millions of
birds and small mammals are killed annually
by free-roaming cats. The suffering of both
cats and birds is all the more tragic
because it is so unnecessary.
Today's cat
owners face an important decision: "Should I
keep my cat
indoors?" For your cat's sake, and that of
the birds and other wildlife in your
neighborhood, the answer to that question
must be "yes!"
Keeping Cats Indoors is
for the Cats...
The average life
expectancy of an outdoor cat is just two to
five years, while an indoor cat may survive
for 17 or more years. Cats who roam are
constantly in danger...
Cars - Millions
of cats are run over by cars each year.
Seeking warmth, outdoor cats crawl into car
engines and are killed or maimed when the
car is restarted. Motorists risk accidents
in attempting to avoid hitting free-roaming
cats.
Animal Attacks -
Torn ears, scratched eyes, abscesses,
internal injuries, diseases, and sometimes
death result from encounters with dogs,
other cats, and wild animals like raccoons,
coyotes and foxes.
Human Cruelty
-
Each year, animal shelters and veterinarians
treat cats who have been shot, stabbed, or
set on fire. Unsupervised cats may also be
captured and sold to research laboratories
or used as "bait" to train fighting dogs.
Overpopulation -
Unaltered free-roaming cats are the single
most important cause of cat overpopulation.
As a result, millions of cats for whom there
are no homes must be euthanized each year.
Disease - Cats
allowed outdoors risk exposure to fatal
diseases, including rabies, feline leukemia,
distemper, and feline immunodeficiency virus
(FIV). Vaccines are not 100 percent
effective; there is no vaccine at this time
for FIV.
Parasites - Cats
allowed outdoors are more likely to contract
debilitating parasites such as worms, ticks,
mites, and fleas.
Poisons and
Traps - Exposure to pesticides, rodenticides
and antifreeze poisons and kills thousands
of outdoor cats each year. Cats are maimed
and killed in traps set for furbearing
animals.
...And
for the Birds
Today, birds and
other wildlife face more obstacles to their
survival than ever before. Wildlife habitats
are destroyed and degraded every day, and
many species are declining as a result. Even
the impacts of natural predators on their
prey is changing based on how humans are
altering natural environments. And the
presence of an unnatural predator - the
domestic cat - is having an impact as well.
Scientists
estimate that cats kill hundreds of millions
of birds each year and three times as many
small mammals. Most birds killed by cats are
members of relatively common species, like
the Northern Cardinal, Song Sparrow and
Dark-eyed Junco; others are rare and
endangered - the California Least Tern, Piping
Plover, Western Snowy Plover and California
Gnatcatcher.
Regardless of the status of the species,
each wild animal suffers when captured by a
cat. By letting our cats outside, we -
perhaps without intent - place a higher
value on the freedom of our pet than on the
life of that cardinal, that chickadee or
that chipmunk she kills.
"Is it Nature's Way for
Cats to Kill Birds?"
A
descendant of the wild cat of Africa and
southwestern Asia, the domestic cat
instinctively hunts and captures prey.
However, wildlife in the Western Hemisphere
did not evolve in the presence of a small,
abundant predator like the domestic cat, and
thus did not develop defenses against them.
Cats were introduced in North America by
European immigrants only a few hundred years
ago.
While
cats may instinctively hunt wildlife, it is
clear that they are not adapted to life in
the wild as are our native wild cats like
the bobcat and mountain lion. Outdoor
domestic cat populations are most commonly
found in and around human settlements; most
do not survive without direct or indirect
support by humans. They are in this way very
different from native predators.
Truths about Cats and Birds
We all know
that cats don't have nine lives, but there
are three other myths about cat predation
we'd like to dispel.
1. "Belled"
cats do kill wildlife. Cats with bells on
their collars can learn to stalk their prey
silently. Even if they don't, wild animals
do not necessarily associate the ringing of
a bell with danger.
2. Even
well-fed cats kill wildlife. The urge to
hunt and the urge to eat are controlled by
different portions of the cat's brain.
3. Once
caught by a cat, few birds survive, even if
they appear to have escaped. Infection from
the cat's teeth or claws or the stress of
capture usually results in death.
Tips for Happy Indoor
Cats
Kittens who
are kept indoors usually show no desire to
venture outside as cats. With knowledge,
patience, and time, we can change most cats
who roam outdoors into happy indoor pets.
These tips will help.
Provide a
safe, outside enclosure, such as a screened
porch.
Provide
window shelves to permit cats to monitor
the outdoors from the safety of the indoors.
Play with
your cat each day. Paper bags and cardboard
boxes are sources of unending delight when
you are away.
Plant kitty
grass (available from pet supply stores) in
indoor pots so your cat can graze.
Clean litter
boxes regularly.
Because
indoor cats may slip out an open door, it's
important to keep in mind the other
essentials of responsible pet ownership:
Spay or
neuter your kitten as early as eight
weeks of age;
Provide
routine veterinary care, including
annual check-ups and vaccinations;
Put an
identification tag on your cat's collar
- it's her ticket home if she slips out;
and
Where
such programs exist, license your cat.
For the Sake of All
Cats...
Support local
cat control and protection plans;
Support
legislation requiring cat owners to register
their cats and prevent them from roaming;
Do not feed
unowned or free-ranging cats without making
a commitment to giving or finding them a
permanent indoor home; and
Take cats for
whom you cannot care to your local animal
shelter to give them the best possible
chance of adoption into loving, lifelong
homes.
More
for the Birds
Support efforts in
your community to protect wildlife and their
habitats. All wild animals have three
basic needs: food, water and plants
that provide escape cover and nesting sites.
If you feed birds in your yard, locate
feeders away from windows and brushy
vegetation that permits neighborhood cats to
hide. Keep your feeders clean and well
stocked. Where possible, establish a
brush pile for wildlife away from feeders.
Avoid using pesticides.