Then in 2004 a Pest Animal Control CRC report cited Pimentel for the figure of 18 million cats and in 2008 the Commonwealth Threat Abatement Plan for predation
by feral cats cited the 2004 report also for the figure of 18 million.
Not exact matches
Another of Dauphine and Cooper's «facts» — that «TNR does not typically reduce
feral cat populations» — is contradicted
by another one of the studies they
cite.
«The Audubon magazine recently
cited a new peer - reviewed paper
by University of Nebraska — Lincoln — researchers concluding that
feral cats — domestic that live outdoors and are ownerless — in other words,
feral — account for $ 17 billion — that's billion — in economic loss from predation on birds in the U.S. every year.»
As its source, TWS
cites a 2004 paper (presented as part of the American Veterinary Medical Association's 2003 Animal Welfare Forum, «Management of Abandoned and
Feral Cats»)
by Linda Winter, founding director of the American Bird Conservancy's
Cats Indoors!
Critical Assessment of Claims Regarding Management of
Feral Cats by Trap - Neuter - Return (2009) This, of course, is the often -
cited paper
by Travis Longcore that became the focus of one of my first blog posts.
Feral Cat Colonies in Florida: The Fur and the Feathers Are Flying (2003) It's no surprise that HAHF would embrace the work of Pamela Jo Hatley, whose 2003 report to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (written while Hatley was a law student, and part of the University of Florida Conservation Clinic) is often
cited by TNR opponents.
Impacts of Free - ranging Domestic
Cats (Felis catus) on birds in the United States: A review of recent research with conservation and management recommendations (2009) HAHF cites the 2009 paper co-authored by former Smithsonian researcher Nico Dauphiné (who resigned after being found guilty of attempted animal cruelty last year, after rat poison was found in cat food outside her apartment building) as evidence of «the incredible impact of free ranging cats on the bird populations of the U.S.» Among the many flaws in «Impacts of Free - ranging Domestic Cats» was the authors» estimate of «117 to 157 million exotic predators,» which was based on David Jessup's inflated (and, not surprisingly, unattributed) «estimate» of «60 to 100 million feral and abandoned cats.&ra
Cats (Felis catus) on birds in the United States: A review of recent research with conservation and management recommendations (2009) HAHF
cites the 2009 paper co-authored
by former Smithsonian researcher Nico Dauphiné (who resigned after being found guilty of attempted animal cruelty last year, after rat poison was found in
cat food outside her apartment building) as evidence of «the incredible impact of free ranging
cats on the bird populations of the U.S.» Among the many flaws in «Impacts of Free - ranging Domestic Cats» was the authors» estimate of «117 to 157 million exotic predators,» which was based on David Jessup's inflated (and, not surprisingly, unattributed) «estimate» of «60 to 100 million feral and abandoned cats.&ra
cats on the bird populations of the U.S.» Among the many flaws in «Impacts of Free - ranging Domestic
Cats» was the authors» estimate of «117 to 157 million exotic predators,» which was based on David Jessup's inflated (and, not surprisingly, unattributed) «estimate» of «60 to 100 million feral and abandoned cats.&ra
Cats» was the authors» estimate of «117 to 157 million exotic predators,» which was based on David Jessup's inflated (and, not surprisingly, unattributed) «estimate» of «60 to 100 million
feral and abandoned
cats.&ra
cats.»
As recently as last year, Longcore et al.
cited the work in their essay «Critical Assessment of Claims Regarding Management of
Feral Cats by Trap — Neuter — Return.»
Longcore et al., for example,
cited the pilot study in their 2009 essay, «Critical Assessment of Claims Regarding Management of
Feral Cats by Trap - Neuter - Return.»
She also underscores the effectiveness of TNR over time
by citing examples of
feral cat colonies — including the one that originally set her and Alley Cat Allies in motion — that no longer exist, in the wake of all their residents having been spayed and neutered, and eventually the final cat living at each di
cat colonies — including the one that originally set her and Alley
Cat Allies in motion — that no longer exist, in the wake of all their residents having been spayed and neutered, and eventually the final cat living at each di
Cat Allies in motion — that no longer exist, in the wake of all their residents having been spayed and neutered, and eventually the final
cat living at each di
cat living at each died.