
|
01-30-2013
|
#31
|
|
Pixel Pusher
Joined: | Aug 2007 |
Location: | New York, NY |
Posts: | 19,590 |
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by Hopeuhavechange
Cat Chow. Or make if Suzy Homemaker feels industrious she can whip something up.
|
lol, I didn't think that was a serious question but I could be wrong. Cats don't even eat what they kill for the most part. If they did, that number would be a lot lower.
We need wins, and that's all we need. I don't give a damn about anyone on this roster over wins. I'd trade Ware, Lee and Dez if it meant more wins.
|
|
|
01-30-2013
|
#32
|
|
Senior Member
Joined: | Apr 2004 |
Location: | Austin, TX |
Posts: | 17,953 |
|
Quote:
|
Yet the new study estimates that free-roaming pets account for only about 29 percent of the birds and 11 percent of the mammals killed by domestic cats each year, and the real problem arises over how to manage the 80 million or so stray or feral cats that commit the bulk of the wildlife slaughter.
|
Looks like the problem is less about people's pet cats and more about the feral cat population.
|
|
|
01-30-2013
|
#33
|
|
I'm Complicated
Years Donated 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012
Joined: | Oct 2005 |
Location: | Chesterfield, VA |
Posts: | 5,135 |
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by Hopeuhavechange
Points for being funny. But a plea for a little little clarity here. Nonnative species introduced into an ecosystem isn't natural. And, btw, a majority of kills are from stray cats living in their various colonies, some 40 million of whom are rounded up and euthanasized every year, lest they overwhelm the environment and broadly communicate diseases within the population and without (nature hard at work-- self-preservation being the 1st law of nature and pathogens are hardly excepted fr the law).
|
The only disease that cats and humans are remotely likely to share is Toxoplasmosis. The last confirmed case of cat to human rabies transmission was 35 years ago and cats are very unlikely to have rabies in general.
And the amount of animals, in particular birds, that are killed by urban sprawl and flying into buildings far outweighs the number killed by cats. Nobody wants to try to track that, though, because you really can't. Just like this article. You can take a small sample of cats vs prey and show the data any way you like and call it accurate.
Not to mention, cats are more likely to kill the sick and the older, more compromised birds that a healthy bird.
As someone that takes care of lots of feral cats for going on a decade, the amount of animals killed by cats is far smaller than articles of this nature portray. If cats were truly killing that many birds, there would be a significant drop off in population and dead birds laying around in vast quantities. But there aren't, because it's simply propaganda.
|
|
|
01-30-2013
|
#34
|
|
Senior Member
Joined: | Sep 2011 |
Posts: | 145 |
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by Faerluna
The only disease that cats and humans are remotely likely to share is Toxoplasmosis. The last confirmed case of cat to human rabies transmission was 35 years ago and cats are very unlikely to have rabies in general.
And the amount of animals, in particular birds, that are killed by urban sprawl and flying into buildings far outweighs the number killed by cats. Nobody wants to try to track that, though, because you really can't. Just like this article. You can take a small sample of cats vs prey and show the data any way you like and call it accurate.
If cats were truly killing that many birds, there would be a significant drop off in population and dead birds laying around in vast quantities. But there aren't, because it's simply propaganda.
Not to mention, cats are more likely to kill the sick and the older, more compromised birds that a healthy bird.
[View Full Quote]As someone that takes care of lots of feral cats for going on a decade, the amount of animals killed by cats is far smaller than articles of this nature portray.
|
forgive one hand typing- are you suggesting the article is mostly/completely a fabrication? Why? I've seen unrelated studies suggest similar numbers for some time. A conspiracy afoot? Who is behind this campaign of propaganda?
I have seen what i believe to be healthy birds taken by cats and deposited around, usually on a porch, most frequently Mourning Doves who lack astute awareness of many other birds; also Robins protecting their brood. I know this fr observation. As for the Toxo disease rt I will have to look into it. I suspect much of that goes undetected or unreported.
Are you advocating for nonnative (but i repeat myself) feral cats..is that a good thing? And house cats should be left to take wild animals for sport and tossed aside when the become bored with the corpse? Oh, it's not really a problem in your view, or is exaggerated i gather. And there are drops in population certain birds which may not be wholly due to cats but they are a factor. Why not eliminate it? Not the cats but free ranging domestics and feral populations? Doesn't seem all that radical to me.
|
|
|
01-30-2013
|
#35
|
|
Senior Member
Joined: | Sep 2011 |
Posts: | 145 |
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by TheCount
lol, I didn't think that was a serious question but I could be wrong. Cats don't even eat what they kill for the most part. If they did, that number would be a lot lower.
|
right very few cats consume their kill. ferals must be an exception. otherwise...
|
|
|
01-30-2013
|
#36
|
|
Diamond surrounded by trash
Years Donated 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013
Joined: | Apr 2005 |
Posts: | 32,047 |
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by Teren_Kanan
What else are they killing? Vermin are the only ones I saw listed in the article. Rabbits, Birds, Moles, Shrews, Chipmunks, Snakes, Bugs, lizards, frogs and voles. Did I miss some non vermin?
|
My thought as well.
victory is ours
|
|
|
01-30-2013
|
#37
|
|
Senior Member
Joined: | Sep 2011 |
Posts: | 145 |
|
And i should recall the times my better half has removed apparently vital, HEALTHY birds fr her cat's mouth which it brought back inside the house and was able to recover and fly away post release. A diminished animal cldnt do so, we know that. Also racked w guilt he has taken two birds to wildlife rehabbers in similar circumstances, and the only obvious issue was the bird was punctured by her cat! These are anecdotes but I have every reason to believe it's typical. Let's face it- cats are remarkably efficient predators.
|
|
|
01-30-2013
|
#38
|
|
Mr. Buckeye
Years Donated 2004, 2007, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012
Joined: | Apr 2004 |
Location: | Buckeye Nation |
Posts: | 12,746 |
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by Hopeuhavechange
right very few cats consume their kill. ferals must be an exception. otherwise...
|
Dexter eats everything he catches except moles.
He never eats them.
He has left me many a Skull licked clean Predator trophy style on my porch.
Oh and he won't eat livers.
He left me last week on my walk...a perfect mouse head only...this one wasn't licked clean though, with it's liver right next to it.
|
|
|
01-30-2013
|
#39
|
|
Mr. Buckeye
Years Donated 2004, 2007, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012
Joined: | Apr 2004 |
Location: | Buckeye Nation |
Posts: | 12,746 |
|
Keep Humans inside, for Natures Sake
Pesticides are killing birds, bees, and bats by the millions
Estimates from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service indicate that millions of birds and fish die every year from pesticide exposure. Scientists are now discovering that even low level exposure is disrupting the animal kingdom and causing new diseases to develop, threatening many species with extinction.
Roughly 90 percent of the nation's rivers and streams are contaminated with pesticides, affecting more than 80 percent of fish. More than 30 percent of the nation's aquifers are contaminated as well, affecting the drinking water of millions of people....
http://www.naturalnews.com/027971_pesticides_bees.html
|
|
|
01-30-2013
|
#40
|
|
De puts the D back in D
Joined: | May 2007 |
Posts: | 2,724 |
|
Moar cat threads please

|
|
|
01-30-2013
|
#41
|
|
Convicted of Gnostical Turpitude
Joined: | Jan 2007 |
Location: | Gatesville, Texa |
Posts: | 11,861 |
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by TheCount
That's precisely the point. Keep your pet cat inside because it is a killing machine.
|
More than that, my cat, Butterkup, is a cybernetic killing machine from the future.
He actually knows two human words: "Sarah" and "Connor". And he's always meowing about them. Quite frankly, he seems obsessed, and I'm a little worried.
"Many of the greatest things man has achieved are not the result of consciously directed thought, and still less the product of a deliberately coordinated effort of many individuals, but of a process in which the individual plays a part which he can never fully understand." - Friedrich Hayek
|
|
|
01-30-2013
|
#42
|
|
Convicted of Gnostical Turpitude
Joined: | Jan 2007 |
Location: | Gatesville, Texa |
Posts: | 11,861 |
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by Hopeuhavechange
Points for being funny. But a plea for a little little clarity here. Nonnative species introduced into an ecosystem isn't natural. And, btw, a majority of kills are from stray cats living in their various colonies, some 40 million of whom are rounded up and euthanasized every year, lest they overwhelm the environment and broadly communicate diseases within the population and without (nature hard at work-- self-preservation being the 1st law of nature and pathogens are hardly excepted fr the law).
Ultimately people are accountable for it and it's not fair to the lovable(?) feline in my view. Domestic cats belong in the domicile playing with string and chasing their shadows. Suppose most dog owners let loose their dogs to roam in packs to hunt little Fluffy wherever he's found...would not this instinctive predation be natural for Rover and Spike? Is this what we want?
|
Excellent points all around.
If people didn't exist, cats would just stay locked up in their homes all day where they couldn't hurt anyone.
"Many of the greatest things man has achieved are not the result of consciously directed thought, and still less the product of a deliberately coordinated effort of many individuals, but of a process in which the individual plays a part which he can never fully understand." - Friedrich Hayek
|
|
|
01-30-2013
|
#43
|
|
Mr. Buckeye
Years Donated 2004, 2007, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012
Joined: | Apr 2004 |
Location: | Buckeye Nation |
Posts: | 12,746 |
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by ScipioCowboy
Excellent points all around.
If people didn't exist, cats would just stay locked up in their homes all day where they couldn't hurt anyone.
|
Yeah like cats never existed outside before humans domesticated them and decide that THEY wanted to keep them inside.
|
|
|
01-30-2013
|
#44
|
|
Mr. Buckeye
Years Donated 2004, 2007, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012
Joined: | Apr 2004 |
Location: | Buckeye Nation |
Posts: | 12,746 |
|
Dexter says just try and keep me inside...

|
|
|
01-30-2013
|
#45
|
|
Senior Member
Joined: | Apr 2004 |
Location: | Austin, TX |
Posts: | 17,953 |
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by ScipioCowboy
More than that, my cat, Butterkup, is a cybernetic killing machine from the future.
He actually knows two human words: "Sarah" and "Connor". And he's always meowing about them. Quite frankly, he seems obsessed, and I'm a little worried.
|
My cat is an indoor cat that just types on the computer all day and somehow dead birds end up piling up by the front door. It is very disconcerting.
|
|
|
| Thread Tools |
|
|
| Display Modes |
Linear Mode
|
Posting Rules
|
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
HTML code is Off
|
|
|
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 05:26 AM.
|