Results 1 to 2 of 2

Thread: Feral cats appear to be pathetic at controlling New York City’s rats

  1. #1
    Hatchling
    Apricity Funding Member
    "Friend of Apricity"

    Mingle's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2016
    Last Online
    @
    Location
    America
    Meta-Ethnicity
    Iranic
    Ethnicity
    Pashtun-American
    Country
    United States
    Region
    Aboriginal
    Y-DNA
    R1a>Z93>FT296004
    mtDNA
    U2c1
    Gender
    Posts
    10,561
    Thumbs Up
    Received: 6,936
    Given: 7,460

    2 Not allowed!

    Default Feral cats appear to be pathetic at controlling New York City’s rats

    Urban felines prefer mice and birds to big, feisty rodents

    People often assume cats enthusiastically kill city rats, but that may be just an urban legend.

    Feral cats caught on video were keen to watch rats lurking around a trash collection center in Brooklyn, says behavioral ecologist Michael Parsons. But cats rarely killed, or even chased, the rats. Cats aren’t a good choice for rat-population control, Parsons, a visiting researcher at Fordham University in New York City, and colleagues suggest September 27 in Frontiers in Environment and Ecology.

    Cats typically prefer smaller prey, he says. A 20-gram bird or a 30-gram mouse can’t defend itself with the sharp-toothed ferocity and heft of a Norway rat. Adult rats at the Brooklyn waste center are more than 10 times that weight, at an average of about 337 grams. For 79 days, cameras set up at the center showed cats killing or nearly killing only three rats. That lackluster performance wouldn’t do much to dent a rat population.

    Parsons and his colleagues had been setting up a different rat study when they noticed five feral cats creeping around the rats that researchers had microchipped at the waste center. Researchers at first bristled at the intrusion, then realized it was a great opportunity to study feral animals in real-life situations, Parsons says. Trying to use lab rats to understand free-ranging rodents’ lives is like extrapolating “knowledge of the wolf from, say, a Chihuahua.”

    The cats at the waste site paid attention to the rats, sometimes even sticking a feline nose into the hole in the wall that rats used as their home entrance. The rats also appeared to be warier, and the more cats that prowled the site on a given day, the less likely the rats were to be spotted, analysis showed. Such apparent disappearances might be why people believe cats help suppress rat populations. But in truth, the rats are probably still there. They’re just harder to see.



    Actual cat attacks on the rats were rare. Out of 306 active-animal video clips collected, only 20 showed a cat stalking a rat. The rare kills occurred when cats had an advantage in pouncing on a rat trying to hide outside its home behind the walls. One clip showed a partial and “very hesitant chase,” Parsons says, “like a stop-and-go dance they do. When the rat stops, the cat stops, too.”

    Hungrier cats get more committed to rat chasing, and some people who release cats to control a rat problem withhold food to encourage hunting, Parsons says. But he argues that starving an animal to force it to confront less-favored and dangerous prey is “a horrible thing to do.”

    The results of the study at the Brooklyn waste center go against popular opinion. But those results fit with earlier findings from alleys in Baltimore, where cats were similarly cagey around the bigger rodents. “Cats do occasionally catch rats, just not very often and not to the extent they reduce the size of the rat populations,” says disease ecologist Gregory Glass, who studied Baltimore rats but is now at the University of Florida in Gainesville.

    Feral cats have other disadvantages, besides reluctant ratcatching. Feral life is tough on the cats and increases perils for wild birds, says Susan Willson, a tropical avian ecologist at St. Lawrence University in Canton, N.Y. Urban sprawls host more variety in bird species than many people realize, especially during migration seasons, and estimates for cat kills top a billion birds a year (SN: 2/23/13, p. 14).




    https://www.sciencenews.org/article/...york-city-rats

  2. #2
    Veteran Member The Lawspeaker's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2009
    Last Online
    11-05-2023 @ 04:45 AM
    Meta-Ethnicity
    Celto-Germanic
    Ethnicity
    Dutch
    Ancestry
    Brabant, Holland, Guelders and some Hainaut.
    Country
    Netherlands
    Politics
    Norway Deal-NEXIT, Dutch Realm Atlanticist, Habsburg Legitimist
    Religion
    Sedevacantist
    Relationship Status
    Engaged
    Age
    36
    Gender
    Posts
    70,127
    Thumbs Up
    Received: 34,729
    Given: 61,129

    2 Not allowed!

    Default

    Cats are just like humans: lazy to a fault. Why run when you can get an easy meal ? I don't blame those clever kitties !



    Wake up and smell the coffee.


Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Similar Threads

  1. Replies: 1
    Last Post: 09-28-2018, 04:41 AM
  2. French government brings in cats to fight the rats
    By PHDNM in forum France - English Entries
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 12-20-2017, 05:18 PM
  3. Replies: 3
    Last Post: 12-01-2017, 08:05 PM
  4. Why We Have New York City and Southern California
    By wvwvw in forum News Articles
    Replies: 1
    Last Post: 06-17-2017, 12:39 AM
  5. Replies: 2
    Last Post: 06-08-2017, 05:29 PM

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •