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    What's this?
Outdoor cats are prolific killers, study finds
Free-roaming house cats kill an estimated 4 billion wild animals across the U.S. every year, including birds, mammals, reptiles and amphibians.
Wed, Aug 08 2012 at 12:57 PM
 143

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Conservation, Environmental Science, Pets, Birds, Wild Animals
cat and mouse

Photo: Niels Hartvig/Flickr

Cat owners often wonder about their pets' secret outdoor lives, but few are curious enough to actually follow them around the neighborhood. And thanks to a new study by the University of Georgia and National Geographic, that isn't necessary: Researchers attached video cameras to 60 house cats that are allowed outside, hoping to learn how free-roaming felines spend their free time.
 
The answer? About a third of pet cats kill time by killing wildlife.
 
That may not surprise cat owners who regularly find tiny corpses on their doorsteps, but the study suggests house cats kill even more prolifically than many people realize. The researchers found the cats that killed did so about 2.1 times every week they spent outside, but brought home fewer than 25 percent of their kills. That could mean U.S. cats kill more than the previous estimate of 1 billion native birds and other animals every year — possibly as many as 4 billion.
 
"The results were certainly surprising, if not startling," says UGA researcher and lead author Kerrie Anne Loyd. "In Athens-Clarke County, we found that about 30 percent of the sampled cats were successful in capturing and killing prey, and that those cats averaged about one kill for every 17 hours outdoors, or 2.1 kills per week. It was also surprising to learn that cats only brought 23 percent of their kills back to a residence."
 
Working with National Geographic's Remote Imaging Department, Loyd and her colleagues attached lightweight video cameras (known as Crittercams, or "KittyCams" in this case) to 60 outdoor house cats in Athens, Ga. The cats' owners volunteered for the study by answering ads in local newspapers, and downloaded footage from the cameras at the end of each recording day. The study extended through all four seasons, and Loyd says the cats averaged five to six hours outside daily.
 
The cats killed a wide range of wild animals, including lizards, voles, chipmunks, birds, frogs and snakes (see the graph below). The study didn't include feral cats, but previous research suggests ownerless felines are at least as deadly as their more coddled cousins. A 2010 study by the University of Nebraska, for example, found that feral cats have driven 33 bird species to extinction worldwide, and that they prey more on native than non-native wildlife. In fact, since domesticated cats aren't native to North America, this leads some wildlife advocates to consider cats an invasive species themselves, on par with kudzu or Asian carp.
 
 
"If we extrapolate the results of this study across the country and include feral cats, we find that cats are likely killing more than 4 billion animals per year, including at least 500 million birds," says George Fenwick, president of the American Bird Conservancy, in a press release about the study. "Cat predation is one of the reasons why one in three American bird species are in decline."
 
"I think it will be impossible to deny the ongoing slaughter of wildlife by outdoor cats given the videotape documentation and the scientific credibility that this study brings," adds Michael Hutchins, executive director and CEO of the Wildlife Society. "There is a huge environmental price that we are paying every single day that we turn our backs on our native wildlife in favor of protecting non-native predatory cats at all costs, while ignoring the inconvenient truth about the mortality they inflict."
 
See the KittyCams website for photos, videos and data from the study. To get tips on keeping cats indoors, check out Ohio State University's Indoor Pet Initiative or the American Bird Conservancy's Cats Indoors Program. And if you know a cat that just can't be fenced in, you could at least attach a bell to its collar, or even dress it up in a bird-protecting "cat bib." (Fair warning: The cat may then want to kill you instead).
 
Related cat stories on MNN:
  • Cats may pose little threat to songbirds
  • To kill a mockingbird, just get a cat
  • Proposed cat leash law sparks hissing match
  • 'CatCam' looks at life from a cat's perspective
 

The opinions expressed by MNN Bloggers and those providing comments are theirs alone, and do not reflect the opinions of MNN.com. While we have reviewed their content to make sure it complies with our Terms and Conditions, MNN is not responsible for the accuracy of any of their information.

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Comments: 143
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anonymous
Dog Hater Aug 12 2012 at 7:07 PM

I hate dogs, but love cats!

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anonymous
Guest Aug 13 2012 at 11:56 AM

I hate people, but love Dogs and Cats

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anonymous
Guest Aug 12 2012 at 10:14 AM

Excatly, What's more, those "dog lovers" only love their breeds of dog. You really think a hunting family with three labs is gonna love a Pom or toy poodle the same? No.

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anonymous
Guest Aug 19 2012 at 8:21 PM

i have a lab cross a poodle cross and a multise cross as well as two cats so please be carfull about your generalizations !!

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anonymous
Guest Aug 12 2012 at 10:06 AM

Maybe its because dog owners don't allow their animals to roam around free. They don't wake up to find dog prints all over their cars. Just a thought.

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anonymous
Anonymeows Sep 29 2012 at 11:56 AM
"Dog owners don't allow their dogs to roam free"? REALLY? Then how, pray tell, did 33 people get KILLED by dogs last year? Nearly all the dog attacks were with the dog OFF of it's property. I hate dogs because: 1. They eat sh*t and then want to come and lick you on the face, preferably right on the mouth. 2.They are aggressive and bite The CDC says there are 4.5 MILLION dog bites in USA each year! 3. They think EVERYWHERE is their territory, including MY yard! 4. They bark and bark and bark and
.... More
bark when I'm trying to sleep 5. They poop EVERYWHERE in the rest areas, parks or anywhere else there is a piece of public or private lawn. 6. They are the only species (besides man) that can be trained to attack somebody that has done nothing to them 7. They are used extensively to "hunt" bears, cougars, rabbits, raccoons, pheasants and other BIRDS, and any other type of wildlife that their ignorant and hateful owners decide to set them on. 8. They are cowards that will only attack something that is either much smaller than them or that they outnumber by several to one. 9. Dog owners take their dogs with them everywhere, often causing inconvenience and trouble to everyone else. (I know that one is not the dog's fault, but still) 10. They LOVE to roll around in anything that is really gross, such as a dead carcass or a big pile of sh*t and they STINK! 11. They are the world's biggest SUCK UPS. They are ass kissers extraordinaire which is probably why people really like them. They want someone to worship them and that is definitely not something a cat will do. You have to earn the respect and love of a cat, a dog comes slobbering to anyone.
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anonymous
Guest Aug 13 2012 at 8:45 AM

I'd rather have cat prints on my car than the constant looking down to avoid all the dog poop everywhere. The vast majority of people in my neighborhood, and town, let their dogs roam free and never clean up after them.

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anonymous
Guest Aug 14 2012 at 12:11 PM

its the cat shit in my flower beds that really pisses me off . . . i clean up after my dog. are any cat owners following them around with baggies?? think not. isn't that why the cats run free? less litter box cleaning?

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anonymous
Guest Nov 20 2012 at 6:45 PM

You must be digging for cat poop, they cover it. dogs just plop and go...and it reeeeekkkkkssssss....

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anonymous
Guest Oct 08 2012 at 7:21 PM

The cat shit could work as fertilizer.

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tarrant's picture
Tarrant Aug 12 2012 at 9:04 AM

My son really hates dogs but loves cats. My ex also loves cats but can't stand dogs. Neither would hurt a dog--but they really don't like them.

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j.claudelandry's picture
j.claudelandry Aug 12 2012 at 11:58 PM

TRY A POP LABRADOR

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anonymous
Cat Lover Aug 12 2012 at 12:32 AM

So this whole article was intended to keep cats, who love and thrive in the outdoors, inside to save birds lives. Bite me.

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anonymous
Guest Aug 28 2012 at 8:39 PM

both you and your cat might not "thrive" anywhere the way we are all looking after this planet.

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anonymous
Looby Lou Aug 12 2012 at 10:04 PM

I keep my cat indoors to keep him safe. I never thought of the wildlife. I had one cat poisoned and one hit by a car. The rest have never gone out and certainly seem happy.

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anonymous
Guest Aug 15 2012 at 8:20 PM

Unfortunately you are right. I feed semi feral cats. Have lost 2 to cars, 1 to marauding dog and one to a hawk ( a really cute kitten) in 5 years. My indoor cats don't go outdoors at all now since I moved to coyote country. You want to keep a happy healthy cat for a long time keep him indoors

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anonymous
Doug Aug 12 2012 at 8:10 AM
You are plain wrong, both factually and with your attitude/opinion. Firstly, cats don't at all "thrive" in the outdoors--an outdoor cat's life expectancy is less than 5 years compared to the 12 years an indoor cat can expect to live. And it doesn't in the least matter if they "love" being outdoors; if they "love" to pee on your bed, do you allow it? Get a life, and learn that loving cats means more than owning cats and petting cats...it means managing both their health/well-being and their impact
.... More
on the world around you.
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anonymous
Guest Aug 14 2012 at 10:37 AM
If cats did not NEED to be outdoors, then why is the petfood industry making MILLIONS of dollars selling "INDOOR FORMULA" catfood? When or where have you ever seen ANY other pet food labelled INDOOR FORMULA other than for cats? This should be enough proof for anyone that cats definitely DO thrive outdoors and in fact NEED to be outdoors to live a natural life. Do YOU stay indoors ALL the time? Cats that are allowed outdoors live a happier life: I know I have been in both situations due to local
.... More
ordinances being passed by CAT HATERS who claim cats destroy gardens and get into trash cans. In the 25 years I have had cats I have NEVER seen my cats go into my trash or destroy my gardens. However, I HAVE seen MANY squirrels,groundhogs,opossums and racoons, etc. destroy my gardens and get into my trash. Perhaps that is because cats can hunt and don't need to scavange like the wild animals do. Humans are such vain, selfish and arrogant beings when it comes to other animal species on this globe. Why do we think we inherited this earth to do with as we please? Why do we think we are allowed to subject other animal species to our own will even at the risk of lowering that species quality of life? AS far as the domestic bird populations go, there are plenty of studies that deduce that foreign species of birds introduced into this country are as much to blame for the decline in the native birds' populations due to their aggressive behavior as any other predator. Humans are responsible for the near extinction of the bald eagle and the american buffalo and countless other species, what should we do to them?
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anonymous
Guest Aug 12 2012 at 1:22 PM
Doug: A person's opinion is something you can adjudge to be wrong because you don't share it, and I don't think this person is factually wrong either. Life expectancy and quality of life are two different things altogether. My kid might last longer if I kept her inside her entire life, but it would hardly be conducive to how much she thrives. If my cat would be miserable living a decade inside the house, it's hardly better than living five happy years outdoors where animals belong. Your version
.... More
of loving a cat means selfishly denying its nature for your own convenience. So you are factually wrong as well.
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anonymous
Guest Aug 13 2012 at 4:37 AM

A person can have an ill-informed opinion. That's why they're opinions, because they're left open to scrutiny in the face of a more factual and often contradictory explanation/opinion.

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anonymous
Doug Aug 12 2012 at 2:05 PM
"Thriving" was the word used, and by no definition can living a much shorter life be construed as thriving. Quality of life? Try being infested with fleas, or getting a communicable disease like Feline AIDS and tell me if you think that a cat's "natural joy" at being outside shouldn't be tempered with some common sense by their human owners. Your interpretation of what makes a cat "miserable" is tailored to your already-held view that it's only natural for them to live outside. Natural doesn't mean
.... More
whatever you want it to mean. Cats, an invasive non-native species, kill native species in droves. What about the native species' happiness? How about their quality of life? Maybe you should reconsider the basis of your opinion.
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anonymous
Kitty Galore Aug 13 2012 at 8:40 AM

Great comments, Doug. I hate to see outdoor cats -- they're at risk for parasites, diseases, being hit by cars, killed by dogs, coyotes, or foxes, and not to mention, they cause mass destruction to native species of birds. For those of you saying you don't care about wildlife, we need these birds for pollination, so we can, um, survive ourselves as a species. My cats are perfectly happy indoors -- they have plenty to do and they're safe there too.

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anonymous
Guest Nov 20 2012 at 6:51 PM
Dogs should be kept in for the same reasons then. They get run over, caught by the animal control and euthanized if not found/rehomed in a short amount of time, they kill wild life such as rabbits, rodents, and I damn well know they chew on tortoise shells (as in Fla's protected gopher torts) ......theyre get abandoned, form dangerous packs that will attack humans (never seen a clouder of feral kitties attack someone)...dogs piss and crap anywhere they wish and don't cover it. Dogs are killed by
.... More
coyotes all the time here...they are also at risks for diseases when outside, or worse...
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anonymous
Anonymeows Sep 29 2012 at 12:11 PM
We need birds to pollinate? LMAO You really should turn off the TV and do some reading. Are you going to blame cats for the honey bees disappearing as well? Have you seen the stories of huge flocks of birds mysteriously falling from the sky dead? We're talking upwards of 500 birds at a time and it has happened many times. Are you going to blame that on cats too? How about all those birds that lay dying just outside the reflective glass of huge office buildings? Is that somehow the cat's fault? Have
.... More
you led such a sheltered life that you aren't aware that the first thing young boys with BB guns shoot is BIRDS? Did you ever notice how many BIRDS fly into the grill of your car when you're driving down the road? Do you put pesticide on your yard? Do you cut down NATIVE weeds, grasses, bushes and trees so that you can plant what pleases your eyes rather than what is the NATURAL food for birds? Do you put out a bird feeder that attracts birds and makes them easy prey for predators? Do you ever think about something before you form an opinion? I didn't think so.
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anonymous
dog Aug 11 2012 at 11:22 PM

cats are over grown rats

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