Why Australia Plans to Kill Millions of Feral Cats

74 comments

 

 

In a controversial move to preserve native fauna, the Australian government is using poisoned sausages to kill 2 million feral cats by 2020. The plan to “cull” 2 million feral cats was set into motion in 2015, and has faced much controversy and criticism. Most recently, the government has settled on sausages stuffed with a potent poison containing the active ingredient sodium fluoroacetate, known as “1080.” The sausages are made of a blend of kangaroo meat, chicken, and other spices designed to appeal to feral cats.

Marked as "invasive predators," feral cats in the wilds of Australia kill hundreds of millions of native birds, mammals, and reptiles each year. Cats arrived with European settlers in the 1700s and are thus classified as an invasive species, one that has apparently been wreaking havoc on native wildlife.

JOSEPH JOHNSON

According to the New York Times, feral cat overpopulation has already led to the extinction of many native species; 34 mammal species found only in Australia have vanished. The Times wrote that cats are thought to be directly responsible for 22 of those extinctions.

While these numbers are certainly devastating, there are Australian scientists who question the basis of targeting 2 million feral cats. The scientists, in part, say the government had not given a clear metric or scientific reason for that number.

They had failed to indicate how, or whether, the cull would actually impact the feral cat population - as feral cats reproduce at very rapid rates. They also did not necessarily state how and whether the culling of 2 million feral cats would actually increase the populations of endangered species. Estimates of the number of feral cats actually living in Australia vary widely.

The researchers published a paper in the journal Conservation Letters, in which they questioned the 2 million target:

“The focus on killing cats runs the risk of distracting attention away from other threats to biodiversity, most prominent of which is widespread, ongoing habitat loss, which has been largely overlooked in the Threatened Species Strategy.”  While feral cats are a big issue, according to CNN, the government has focused heavily on them over more “politically sensitive” issues like habitat loss caused by urban expansion, logging, and mining.

The researchers continued in their published paper:  "The culling target [of 2 million] is a highly visible symbol of a broader campaign around feral cat research and management in Australia, rather than a direct indicator of conservation action and success. We are concerned that progress toward the 2 million target could be misinterpreted as progress toward conserving threatened species when the link between the two is not clear.”

Similarly, Kelly O’Shanassy, chief executive of the Australian Conservation Foundation, called the program "commendable;" however, she also states it fails to address habitat loss, which is an even greater threat to vulnerable species.

"The strategy … fails to meaningfully address the biggest threat to threatened species and ecological communities — the loss and fragmentation of habitat — either through investment in new protected areas or by safeguarding existing critical places," she told The Guardian.

This plan to cull cats not only in the hundreds of thousands, but in the millions, is why programs like Trap, Netuer, Release are important to stopping feral cat overpopulation over time. TNR programs reduce the number of feral kittens being born and work to prevent overpopulation.

What is TNR?

Trap-Neuter-Return (TNR) is a proven humane method to spay or neuter unaltered feral cats by safely trapping them, then returning them to the location where they were picked up.

  1. Trap: All feral cats in a colony, or as many as possible, are humanely trapped.
  2. Neuter: The trapped cats are taken to an animal or veterinary clinic to be spayed or neutered, receive vaccinations, and are sometimes marked by eartipping to let people know that the cat has been through the TNR process.
  3. Return: Healthy adult feral cats are returned to their outdoor homes, where their lives are greatly improved without the strains of mating behaviors (aggression, fighting) and pregnancy. Stray cats and kittens that are socialized to humans are adopted into homes.

 

What do you think? Let us know in the comments below. 



74 comments


  • Brigitte Bouhours

    We cannot deny that feral cats, like other feral animals (pigs, goats, horses), are a big problem in Australia. They are also an easy target and a scapegoat for a government that value economic growth and development above all else. The current government does not address the consequences of land clearing, mining, pollution with the resulting large scale loss of habitat; they target feral cats instead of regulating their corporate mates’ activities.


  • Eileen

    I think that is despicable. Poison is a very, very cruel form of MURDER. What is wrong with Trap, neuter, release. Not just murder.


  • Rachel Keyte

    As an Australian, I am sickened at this, as are many of us. Our current government is a cruel, heartless mob and will do anything to look like they’re doing something (other than actually address issues that need addressing, such as environment, fairness for the disadvantaged etc). I wish your article was titled “Australian Government” rather than “Australians”. The majority of people here do not want this to happen.

    Apart from being completely inhumane, it ignores the fact that cats will not be the only species to suffer and die horrible deaths from this. It could end up killing some of the species they are professing to try and protect.

    Please don’t tar all Aussies with the brush that our disgusting government presents :’(


  • Linda Sioui

    A Trap-neuter-and release program would work way better.


  • Karen Ham

    The absolute gaul of your Country to kill all of those cats which are creatures of God’s, not yours.

    God will judge you if you do this.

    If you continue to do this horrific act of murder, God will respond.
    You are not God!
    😡


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Why Australia Plans to Kill Millions of Feral Cats