Do you have a pet cat ?

[i]Cats are formidable hunters...[/i]

The cat is a carnivorous mammal and is very well adapted to hunting small mammals and birds. Being largely nocturnal hunters, cats may travel for several kilometres at night in search of prey. Cats have excellent eyesight, hearing and sense of smell. They can detect the smallest movement and can hear the scratching of a mouse many metres away.

Cats can also find their prey just by following the scent trail left by small animals as they move along the ground. They are also very able climbers. All of these features together with four sets of retractable claws, and teeth adapted for gripping, tearing and shearing, make the cat a formidable hunter.

Feral cats prefer live prey but do occasionally scavenge carrion or human food scraps. They are opportunistic predators meaning that their diet generally reflects the fauna present in the area where they live and hunt.
Other food items include small mammals, birds, reptiles (particularly skinks), frogs, fish, invertebrates and even vegetable matter.

Domestic cats often continue to hunt, even when fed on a regular basis. This is because cats instinctively react to movement, particularly rapid jerky movements. The prey is often left uneaten and may be brought home. Surveys of domestic cats reveal that the list of prey matches that for feral cats. Hence, domestic cats also impact negatively on native wildlife.

Predation of native wildlife by cats is not the only reason for concern. Cats are the definitive host of the protozoan parasite Toxoplasma gondii which causes toxoplasmosis and is known to induce abortion in sheep and to infect humans and wildlife species. Toxoplasmosis can cause central nervous system and systemic disease leading to death in bandicoots and other wildlife species.

Although there is a standing population of feral cats, recruitment is constantly occurring from the domestic population. Even the best kept cat can go wild, whether through wandering too far from its home area when hunting or via interactions with feral cats.

Unfortunately unwanted domestic cats or kittens are often dumped by irresponsible owners. If they survive in the wild these discarded pets join the feral population and may breed with other feral cats if they have not been desexed.
Feral cats are not just a problem in the bush. Indeed, a greater density of feral cats occur in and around cities, towns and rural settlements. This is probably due to more stable and abundant food sources being available in these areas. The presence of domestic cats may also attract feral cats to population centres.

[b]How can you help?[/b]

The negative impact on native wildlife by feral and domestic cats can be minimised. If you own a cat the following suggestions can help reduce any impact your pet has (or could have) on native wildlife.

* If your cat is desexed it cannot breed with feral cats (whether it goes wild or not), and the inconvenience of unwanted kittens is also prevented. Desexing is a simple procedure that can be conducted at your local veterinary surgery.
* A cat's home range (the area in which it lives and hunts) may be reduced by up to 75% by detaining it at night. This often results in a substantial decrease in the number of native animals killed by individual cats overall. Cats that are kept in at night also live longer than those that are not. This is because they are not out fighting or mating with other cats or contracting diseases from them. Road accidents are also a major cause of death for domestic cats, so keeping them in at night greatly reduces this risk.
* Fit your cat with a collar and two bells, one on either side of the name tag so that potential prey are warned of the cats approach. Many cats continue to hunt successfully with a single bell. A second bell can reduce its chances of success.
* Do not feed a cat raw meat (This can lead to toxoplasmosis)

Cats are remarkable animals and they make good pets. It has been shown that people who own a pet often live longer than those that do not. Hence a cat can be a very beneficial companion. With responsible ownership people can continue to enjoy their cat while at the same time protecting and enjoying our native wildlife.

5 comments

Gerry, a good observation. You stated

"Cats are remarkable animals and they make good pets. It has been shown that people who own a pet often live longer than those that do not. Hence a cat can be a very beneficial companion. With responsible ownership people can continue to enjoy their cat while at the same time protecting and enjoying our native wildlife."

You are referring to cats, not, some of the modern youth?

It has been quoted that some modern families, don't have children, they have litters!!!

Our two oriental Cats give us much happiness! and we try to make their lives very healthy and happy.

We also love birds and all animals so of course never let our cats out at night but even moreso our cats never even see the front yard but have a very large house to explore and their own beds and chairs with a courtyard back garden with heaps of climbing things including ladders because our two love climbing ladders which Peter has made cat proof (the fences er not the ladders) lol.

We have three rooms with nightlights so they can see and use these three rooms at night

but if we let them up to the rooms we use they would want in and out the door all night and give us no sleep.

Vienna (female) is able to fetch like a dog and also brings things and drops them on our feet to be thrown and taps either Peter or I on the leg to let us know she wants to play so of course we do until she tells us enough :)

Espresso (male) is also like a puppy and stands on his back legs for pats against us all the time.

These cats are a joy to us and grateful they allow us to be their handservants.

We have already been to one Sunday Market even though home by 9 as we were there at 7 am. Now off to another.

Have a lovely Sunday folks. Christmas Carols and Hymns were being played on a loudspeaker today and people were really enjoying the beautiful day and music.

Christmas is a lovely time of year.

All the best

Phyl.

I am told that

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Dogs have masters...............Cats have staff............... :lol:

When a cat does it's toileting outside on the grass it can leave a parasite which is deadly to native animals.

I have seen wallabies die a slow and painful death from toxoplasmosis, first they go blind which is usually the first sign the animal is affected, but by then it is too late to save them.

If a cat has eaten a mouse or a rat, there is a good chance it carries the parasite,



An interesting article I found on toxoplasmosis:



This is ALL THINGS CONSIDERED from NPR News. I'm Jacki Lyden.



A new twist on an age-old story is the subject of today's Science Out of the Box.



LYDEN: If you've ever seen your cat catch a mouse, you might think, wow, what a clever cat I have. It turns out you may not have such a clever cat after all. You may be seeing the work of a clever parasite. NPR's David Kestenbaum reports on some new research you may find unsettling.



DAVID KESTENBAUM: To understand this story, think of yourself not as the cat or the mouse. Put yourself in the shoes of a tiny single-celled parasite.



Dr. ROBERT SAPOLSKY (Neuroscientist, Stanford University): Toxoplasma gondii, not as in Mahatma, but spelled somewhat different than that.



KESTENBAUM: This is Robert Sapolsky, a neuroscientist at Stanford University. Toxo, as he calls it, has a strange life. It spends part of its time riding around inside a rat or a mouse that it has infected, but here's the tricky part - this furry lodging? Not a place to breed.



Dr. SAPOLSKY: They can only reproduce sexually in the gut of cats.



KESTENBAUM: In the guts of cats? That's the place where it…



Dr. SAPOLSKY: Yes. Who knows what that one was about, but that's where it has sex.



KESTENBAUM: Okay, so you're the parasite. You're happily freeloading off a mouse or a rat. But you need to get yourself into a cat to reproduce. So how do you pull that one off?



Dr. SAPOLSKY: Toxo does something incredibly elegant that it migrates up to the brain of the rat…



KESTENBAUM: Where, somehow, it changes the way the rat behaves so that the rat, when it smells a cat or cat urine, does not do the normal thing and run like hell.



Dr. SAPOLSKY: Instead, it makes the rodents decide the cat's smell is kind of nice, and they go right up to it.



KESTENBAUM: The cat pounces, catches the rat. The cat thinks, darn, I'm good. The rat thinks, what I am doing? And the Toxoplasma thinks, mission accomplished. A few chews by the cat and Toxoplasma gondii is home free in the gut of the cat, where it can have sex. Its offspring catches a ride out of the cat on cat feces. Another rat or mouse picks them up, and the whole cycle begins again.



Dr. SAPOLSKY: If you really reflect on it, you get, sort of, the heebie-jeebies.



KESTENBAUM: Sapolsky read about all this five years ago in an obscure journal, and the question he had was this - what was the parasite doing to the rat's brain, so that the rats, instead of fearing the smell of a cat, are drawn to it. Sapolsky's lab bought some Toxoplasma, bought some rats, bought some bobcat urine…



Dr. SAPOLSKY: It never occurred to me, you could buy bobcat urine, but it turns out you can.



KESTENBAUM: And they tried to find out. They wanted to know how clever was the parasite. Was it making surgical strikes on specific circuits in the brain, or just generally wreaking havoc? Sapolsky's team tested infected rats. They seemed remarkably normal. Sense of smell, fine. Could run a maze, fine.



Dr. SAPOLSKY: They're still anxious about other things that rats are anxious about.



KESTENBAUM: Just that one thing had changed - the rats had an unusual fondness for bobcat urine. How was Toxo doing it? The researchers studied the rats' brains. It's known that Toxoplasma travels through the brain and makes cysts.



Dr. SAPOLSKY: Where do you get the most cysts? And it turned out, if you had to the design the perfect hamster(ph) and this was the part of the brain called the amygdala. Amygdala, you learn anything about fear and anxiety in an introductory neuroscience class, and the first part of the brain that I could mention is the amygdala. And there's twice as many of these cysts in the amygdala as anywhere else in the brain.



KESTENBAUM: That could explain why the rats aren't afraid of cat smell. He had no idea how the parasite creates an attraction. Sapolsky says if you asked him to make a drug that would be this specific, he'd have no idea how to do it.



Dr. SAPOLSKY: You go to one of these neuroscience meetings where 25,000 neuroscientists running around like headless chickens. And, like, hundreds, thousands, of them study fear and phobias and anxiety, and this protozoan parasite knows more about anxiety than we do. It's totally amazing.



KESTENBAUM: What does this little thing look like?



Dr. SAPOLSKY: Under a microscope, it looks like a little squiggle. That is about.



KESTENBAUM: The little squiggle is doing all that.



Dr. SAPOLSKY: It's a very evolved little squiggle.



KESTENBAUM: The squiggles are not just in rats. Toxo is pretty common, and there are decent odds that you are, or were at some point, infected with Toxoplasma. Some studies indicate it may have some subtle behavioral effects on us. The research appeared this month in the journal proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.



David Kestenbaum, NPR News.

[color=blue] Toxo is pretty common, and there are decent odds that you are, or were at some point, infected with Toxoplasma. Some studies indicate it may have some subtle behavioral effects on us [/color]

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Now you tell us ...................

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