Spaying and neutering feral cats reduces the number
of homeless animals born every year.
Spay / neuter efforts for feral animals not only decrease the number
of homeless animals born each year, but they also reduce or eliminate unwanted «nuisance» behaviors such as fighting, yowling, and spraying.
Thanks to this service, we play an active, important role in reducing the number
of homeless animals born by offering low - cost surgery to spay or neuter dogs and cats.
We play an important role in reducing the number
of homeless animals born by offering low cost surgery to spay or neuter pets.
Not exact matches
Our fleet
of mobile clinics has sterilized more than 102,000
animals — including thousands
of feral cats and pit bulls — for free or almost nothing in the last 10 years, preventing tens
of thousands
of animals from being
born into a world already bursting at the seams with unwanted and
homeless animals.
Messages about how spaying and neutering reduces the number
of homeless / unwanted
animals born annually are the most motivating to encourage people to have their dogs and cats sterilized, along with educating the public about the safety and quality
of low - cost clinics and the appropriate age for a pet to undergo surgery.
By preventing unwanted
animals from being
born, we will also reduce the strain on already tight agency and local budgets that must cover the cost
of caring for and ultimately disposing
of unwanted and
homeless animals.
The most common source
of owned cats was from a friend or relative (42 % in 2005 versus 33 % in 1993), followed by being found as a free - roaming
homeless cat (20 % in 2005 versus 32 % in 1993), a public or private
animal shelter (16 % in 2005 versus 12 % in 1993), a breed rescue group (9 % in 2005 versus 2 % in 1993), a breeder (4 % in both years), an ad in a newspaper or adopted or purchased in a pet store (2 % in 2005 versus 6 % in 1993), a negligible percentage
born at home (< 1 % in 2005 versus 6 % in 1993), and the remainder coming from various minor or unknown sources.
White River Humane Society's mission is to care for the lost and
homeless animals of Lawrence County, while providing education and services to the public that will lead to reducing the number
of unwanted
animals born in our community.
Sterilization
of animals decreases not only the number
of homeless and feral
animals born each year, but it also decreases unwanted behaviors in
animals, including roaming and aggression, which often lead to the surrender and euthanasia
of animals.
«It can improve your pet's health and longevity and decrease the number
of animals born homeless or unwanted.»
Related
Animal Abuse and Neglect,
Bear Trophy Hunting, Biomedical Research, Captive Hunts, Captive Marine Mammals, Carriage Horses, Chaining and Tethering Dogs, Chimpanzees Used in Research, Circuses,
Animals in Entertainment, Cockfighting, Wildlife Killing Contests, Cruel Confinement
of Farm
Animals, Cruel Slaughter Practices, Dangerous Exotic Pets, Dissection, Dogfighting, Dogs and Cats in the Fur Trade, Dove Shooting, Environmental Impact, Outdoor Cats, Fisheries and Marine Life, Force - Fed
Animals, Fox Penning, Fur Production: Caged & Trapped
Animals, Fur Used in Fashion, Greyhound Racing, Habitat Loss and Fragmentation, Hog - Dog Fighting,
Homeless Horses, Horse Slaughter, Internet Hunting, Lethal Wildlife Management, Marine Mammal Stranding, Marine Pollution and Noise, Medical Training Using
Animals, Pain and Distress in Research
Animals, Pet Overpopulation, Pets Used in Experiments, Pheasant Stocking, Poaching, Puppy Mills, Rattlesnake Roundups, Shark Tournaments, World Spay Day, Tennessee Walking Horses, Threatened and Endangered Species, Wild Horses, Wildlife and Roads, Wildlife Overpopulation, Wildlife Trade, Zoos and Exhibitors
Sterilization directly impacts the number
of animals who are killed in our nation's shelters by reducing the number
of pets entering shelters and freeing up homes for
homeless pets who are already
born.
Eureka, CA — Friends for Life Friends For Life
Animal Rescue is a non-profit organization dedicated to ending the suffering and killing of homeless companion animals in Humboldt County and beyond through programs designed to (1) place homeless companion animals in permanent, loving, adoptive homes, (2) reduce the number of dogs and cats being born, and (3) enrich the human - animal
Animal Rescue is a non-profit organization dedicated to ending the suffering and killing
of homeless companion
animals in Humboldt County and beyond through programs designed to (1) place
homeless companion
animals in permanent, loving, adoptive homes, (2) reduce the number
of dogs and cats being
born, and (3) enrich the human -
animalanimal bond.
riends For Life
Animal Rescue is a non-profit organization dedicated to ending the suffering and killing of homeless companion animals in Humboldt County and beyond through programs designed to (1) place homeless companion animals in permanent, loving, adoptive homes, (2) reduce the number of dogs and cats being born, and (3) enrich the human - animal
Animal Rescue is a non-profit organization dedicated to ending the suffering and killing
of homeless companion
animals in Humboldt County and beyond through programs designed to (1) place
homeless companion
animals in permanent, loving, adoptive homes, (2) reduce the number
of dogs and cats being
born, and (3) enrich the human -
animalanimal bond.
With the help
of some extraordinary
homeless animals — dogs like Sweet Pea, Big Girl, Abby, Stewie, and countless others — Kopp realized from her suffering something beautiful had been
born.
More importantly, breeding your pet decreases the number
of available homes for
animals who are already
born and
homeless.
Tulip was
born in 2013 and was unfortunately one
of the hundreds
of thousands
of companion
animals in the U.S. that was left
homeless.
The statistics that A Forever Home
Animal Rescue Senior volunteer Linda Rock shared says that 9 out
of 10 dogs
born can become
homeless at one point in their life and that 99 %
of the 6 million cats and dogs euthanized yearly in the U.S. are healthy and adoptable.
They deliver the artists» customary blend
of tart and sweet, neatly distilled in a single tableau
of two toddler - size
animal figures, a rat and a
bear, asleep and softly breathing on a pile
of blankets, like F. A. O. Schwarz toys gone
homeless.