urbpan: (I LOVE DOGS)
[personal profile] urbpan
Domestic cats are some of the worst invasive species when allowed to roam free and breed. They kill native prey species and compete with native predators. (They also spread diseases like rabies and toxoplasmosis.) In Australia, a place free of placental mammalian predators for millions of years, they are especially bad. That's why they can get away with a feral cat recipe contest while in America we couldn't get a simple hunting season going, on the grounds that it was "cruel and inhumane" (As if somehow hunting feral cats is more cruel than hunting feral pigs, or for that matter, any animal.) Unfortunately for those who would eat cats to extinction in Australia, it turns out they aren't especially good eatin'. Their fur could be a good product to motivate a cat hunt, but you couldn't import it into Europe. Fur, useful as it may be, has fallen out of favor in recent decades, anyway.

What do you think? Any good way to control feral cats that you can think of? Capture/Sterilize/Release is one solution, but still puts cats out in the wild, to kill birds and spread disease. Part of my new job is dealing with feral cats, and not all of them are saved. It seems like a waste to toss a carcass in the trash, or incinerate it, when it's made of useful meat and fur. Or is pragmatism uncalled for with the sensitive issues surrounding beloved species? Do all cats (and horses) deserve decent burials? What to do with the glut of unwanted and pest animals?

Date: 2007-09-03 06:44 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dragonwrites.livejournal.com
the answer is more coyotes...

Date: 2007-09-03 06:53 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] urbpan.livejournal.com
That might make more of a problem for our Australian friends, especially once those coy-dingoes start roaming the outback!

Date: 2007-09-03 08:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dragonwrites.livejournal.com
wow, i am too us-centric, aren't i? the solution in australia must be more dingoes.

though i would like to see a coyote-dingo hybrid.

anyway, i read this awesome book called stiff (i think the subtitle was "the secret life of cadavers") and the last chapter discusses the human composting movement (not yet a legal method of corpse disposal, but give it time) . sentiment be damned...i think we ought to compost everyone and everything. environmentally sound, free fertilizer. cremation can't be good for the enviroment.

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