Sunday, May 6, 2012

please keep your cat(s) indoors

Yesterday, I picked up a flier of the Lindsay Wildlife Museum entitled 'CATS - Please Keep Your Cat Indoors.' I'm typing up the information without permission; I'm sure they wouldn't mind as I think what it says is so important: 

If you love wildlife, keep your cat indoors because
• Every day, cats kill between 4 and 5 million birds in the U.S.
• Collar bells don't work. Birds and other wildlife do not associate bells with being stalked. 
• Ground-nesting birds are very susceptible to predation by cats.
• Despite being well fed, cats will hunt small wild animals. 
• Most young birds leave the nest before they are able to fly well, spending a day or two on the ground as they learn. These fledglings are frequently caught by cats. 
• Most of the birds caught by cats, but not killed outright, die of their injuries or infection. 
• Cats that kill small rodents can eliminate a critical food source for owls and hawks. 

If you love your cat, keep it indoors because 
• Cars kill millions of cats each year. 
• Outdoor cats are exposed to serious, and often fatal, infectious diseases such as feline leukemia and rabies. 
• Parasites such as fleas, ticks and intestinal worms pose a health threat to your cat. Some of these can be transmitted to humans. 
• Outdoors, cats can be chased by dogs or other cats, and killed, injured or lost. 
• Cats are often shot at, poisoned, trapped or tortured by neighbors who are annoyed by cats using their gardens as a litter box or hunting grounds. 
• Coyotes, great-horned owls and other wild animals are known to regularly kill and eat house cats. 
• Cats that spend time outdoors require more medical treatment and their life span is much shorter than cats who live indoors.

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