When «fixed» cats are returned, they guard their colony's territory, discouraging
unaltered cats from moving in and repeating the cycle of overpopulation.
Not exact matches
By fixing the
cats that are at your location and keeping them there, this will keep out other
cats (that are
unaltered)
from moving in and quickly repopulating the area.
Shelters are full, rescues are full and many people are at a loss for what to do with litters they have
from unaltered pet
cats or that they have found on the streets.
If your female dog or
cat was in heat at the time of surgery, you must keep them away
from unaltered males for at least two weeks.
This TNR process prevents the tremendous suffering of kittens born
from the breeding of
unaltered feral
cats, and is the only humane and effective method of phasing out colonies of abandoned domestic
cats and their offspring.
Spaying and neutering has a ripple effect - two
unaltered cats and their litters could produce over 420,000 animals in 7 years; but a simple surgery can prevent this
from happening.
Adapted
from our in - depth spay / neuter research findings, this hand card is designed help owners of
unaltered cats and dogs make the important decision to spay or neuter their pets.
The benefits to keeping feral
cats around outweigh the cost of altering them.Removing feral
cats from a location is ineffective as it opens a territorial void and then more
unaltered cats move in, starting the breeding cycle all over again.
MANDATORY SPAY / NEUTER ORDINANCE FOR ALL
CATS AND DOGS OVER SIX MONTHS OF AGE (To be heard at 7:30 p.m. or thereafter) Recommendation: (1) Direct the City Attorney to draft an ordinance and return within 60 days mandating the spay / neuter of all cats and dogs over six months of age, excluding those that meet exclusion criteria; (2) Establish a fee differential such that a dog license for an unaltered animal is $ 60 more than spayed / neutered animals; and (3) Find that mandatory spay / neuter of all cats and dogs is exempt from the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) pursuant to State CEQA Guidelines, Section 15061 (b)
CATS AND DOGS OVER SIX MONTHS OF AGE (To be heard at 7:30 p.m. or thereafter) Recommendation: (1) Direct the City Attorney to draft an ordinance and return within 60 days mandating the spay / neuter of all
cats and dogs over six months of age, excluding those that meet exclusion criteria; (2) Establish a fee differential such that a dog license for an unaltered animal is $ 60 more than spayed / neutered animals; and (3) Find that mandatory spay / neuter of all cats and dogs is exempt from the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) pursuant to State CEQA Guidelines, Section 15061 (b)
cats and dogs over six months of age, excluding those that meet exclusion criteria; (2) Establish a fee differential such that a dog license for an
unaltered animal is $ 60 more than spayed / neutered animals; and (3) Find that mandatory spay / neuter of all
cats and dogs is exempt from the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) pursuant to State CEQA Guidelines, Section 15061 (b)
cats and dogs is exempt
from the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) pursuant to State CEQA Guidelines, Section 15061 (b)(3).
The mating creates a domino effect and thousands of more kittens can be born
from just a few
unaltered cats.
I inherited over 27
unaltered cats and kittens when my husbands ex wife moved out.She did not believe God wanted us to alter any living creature.So needless to say I had a mess on my hands.But with help
from some very wonderful people we managed to get all fixed, vetted and re-homed, as I had a lot of close friends who had small farms, and they took a bunch each!
I trapped numerous
cats that were sick
from previous injuries (mainly due to fighting, given that they were
unaltered).