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Because you have to blame something.

This morning I found a link to an article in my news digest - about how free-ranging cats are a danger to species diversity, and may be to blame for species going extinct.

Well. WHAT?

I'm aware that there's been a discussion about cats hunting, killing, and (not always) eating all kinds of prey animals, and that this should be curtailed to give the birds and whatever other species more of a chance to survive. Yes, cats are fierce predators with a very strong hunting instinct, and yes, I can see that this may pose a problem. I'm also not thrilled about cats killing birds.

However, I'm also not convinced that keeping cats indoors all the time is the perfect solution. It's definitely safer for the cat in regards to traffic dangers (rarely do cars go inside of living spaces, after all) - but having seen how our old lady lived a second spring when she discovered the Great Outdoors, keeping cats penned up inside, even if it's a rather large place, is also not the best thing that can happen to them. (There is a lot of pros and cons for indoor vs. outdoor cats, but all the cats that I have had in my own life were outdoor cats, and were very fond of their freedom. And I am talking about Germany here, which had the wild cat before the house cat came, so it's not really an invasive species here. Things are different for areas where cats are not more-or-less native predators. Also - feral cats are a problem everywhere, and they should be caught and at least neutered so they cannot breed without restriction. There's enough cats around already.)

To get back to the main topic though - in my firm opinion, free-ranging cats may today pose a problem for animal species that are in their prey spectrum, and are already struggling. The reason for that, however, is not the fact that humans keep cats as pets and companions, or else we'd have lost a lot more species since the Middle Ages or even earlier. Species diversity is endangered because humans have been very good at making bad decisions, at impacting the habitats of a lot of species, and reducing biodiversity overall through the use of monoculture, pesticides, herbicides, and general other Stuff That Is Very Bad For The Environment (TM). And it really ruffles my feathers to have that blamed on cats now. Because it's much easier, obviously, to say that cats are to blame for this or that going extinct than our ruining the planet.

Interestingly, the article itself, from what I've read of it, is not blaming it all on cats as much as the news digest snippet that I got sent does. If you're interested, it is open access in Nature and you can find it here. Linked within is another, equally interesting article about "Invasive predators and global biodiversity loss" where, interestingly, not only cats are listed - but also foxes, rodents, and other imported invasive species. And also interestingly, rodents have played at least as large, if not a larger, role than cats. In any case, the main culprit for importing these species is... the human.

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Comments 2

Harma on Friday, 15 December 2023 15:26

In my area of the world, there has been a big movement to re-introduce storks. In every nook of the province one would place a stand for the storks to build their nests on. Now the farmers complain about these "vermin" eating all the eggs of ground nesting birds, while the farmers are blamed for the loss of field birds due to the way they work the fields.

Storks also cause problems for the railways because they build their nests on the signal posts and such.

Solve one problem, create another.

In my area of the world, there has been a big movement to re-introduce storks. In every nook of the province one would place a stand for the storks to build their nests on. Now the farmers complain about these "vermin" eating all the eggs of ground nesting birds, while the farmers are blamed for the loss of field birds due to the way they work the fields. Storks also cause problems for the railways because they build their nests on the signal posts and such. Solve one problem, create another.
Miriam Griffiths on Friday, 05 January 2024 09:02

I came to a very similar conclusion to you a while back. IMO, it's also about ease of counting.

It's comparatively easy to do a study and count how many small critters a domestic cat kills - just stick a little camera on your (reasonably willing) cat. Hell, the cat will often bring the dead/dying small critter back to the house and present it to you - very easy recording! In contrast, estimating how many small critters don't exist because they were never conceived, never born/hatched, never made it out of the nest, etc. due to human-caused habitat destruction, pollution (including light, sound, etc.), hunting, etc. is much harder to quantify. It's also much harder to interpret as a non-specialist (hence less likely to get picked up and correctly reported in the news).

Which is not to say, as indeed you've pointed out, that cats (especially where they are non-native) cannot be problematic. It's more that they're hardly the sole or even main problem.

I came to a very similar conclusion to you a while back. IMO, it's also about ease of counting. It's comparatively easy to do a study and count how many small critters a domestic cat kills - just stick a little camera on your (reasonably willing) cat. Hell, the cat will often bring the dead/dying small critter back to the house and present it to you - very easy recording! In contrast, estimating how many small critters don't exist because they were never conceived, never born/hatched, never made it out of the nest, etc. due to human-caused habitat destruction, pollution (including light, sound, etc.), hunting, etc. is much harder to quantify. It's also much harder to interpret as a non-specialist (hence less likely to get picked up and correctly reported in the news). Which is not to say, as indeed you've pointed out, that cats (especially where they are non-native) cannot be problematic. It's more that they're hardly the sole or even main problem.
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Monday, 25 November 2024

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