The American
Bird Conservancy (ABC), the leading bird conservation organization
in the United States, advises that as coyotes continue to move into
and around large cities, owners of cats should think twice before
letting their pet roam free outdoors. Studies show that outdoor cats
make up 13% to 42% of coyote diets in those environments.
 |
|
Coyote, USFWS |
A study
just published in the spring edition of The Wildlife Professional,
focuses on the urban coyote reality and references sightings of the
carnivore in Central Park and Manhattan. While coyote attacks on
humans are rare, the study says that when human attacks have
occurred, “…there is a correlation between high percentages of
anthropogenic food sources – such as dog food, trash, and domestic
cats.” It states further that reducing such incidents might require
removing all exterior food sources, including cats.
According to one widely-cited scientific study on cat mortality from
coyotes,
Observations of
Coyote-Cat Interactions
by Shannon Grubbs of the University of
Arizona and Paul Krausman of the University of Montana,
coyotes regularly feed on cats. This study was published in the
Journal of Wildlife Management, and chronicles researchers tracking
coyotes in Tucson, Arizona, where 36 coyote-cat interactions were
observed of which 19 resulted in coyotes killing cats.
Other
studies have found that approximately 13% of a coyote’s diet
consists of cats. However, in the Grubbs-Krausman study, of the 45
instances where coyotes were observed feeding, 42% 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 raises questions about Trap, Neuter, Release programs (TNR),
where feral cats are caught, neutered, and then released back into
the wild. ABC has consistently raised concerns about TNR programs
because these cats kill hundreds of millions of birds each year, and
also because TNR programs do not provide a humane solution for the
cats themselves.
“Well-meaning but misguided cat lovers 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, ABC’s Vice President of
Conservation Advocacy. “Owners who let their pet cat out into
their neighbourhoods may be unknowingly ringing the dinner bell to
unseen coyotes. We urge states, cities, and communities to reject
this inhumane approach to the feral cat problem and instead, require
responsible care of pets and the removal of feral cats from the
wild."
Despite
this risk of predation, TNR has been adopted in areas with large
coyote populations. Arizona’s Maricopa County, which is the fourth
largest county in the country with nearly four million people, has
adopted TNR.
“County
officials are wrong when they say TNR is an effective and humane
solution,” said Schroeder. “The truth is that studies repeatedly
shows that in almost all cases, TNR fails to eliminate cat colonies
because not all the cats can be caught, and because people see these
colonies as places they can dump their unwanted and usually
un-neutered cat., The reality is that TNR perpetuates many of the
problems caused by feral cats, including risks to human and health,
public nuisance, and the predation of birds and other wildlife.
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 has produced a short film “Trap,
Neuter, and Release: Bad for Cats, Disaster for
Birds,”
which reveals how Trap, Neuter, and Release is failing to
substantially reduce cat numbers despite advocates’ claims, and is
contributing to the deaths of an estimated 500 million birds each
year. In addition, cats have been responsible for the extinction of
an estimated 33 species of birds. |