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A Survey of Public Opinion on Cat (Felis catus) Predation and the Future Direction of Cat Management in New Zealand. | LitMetric

A Survey of Public Opinion on Cat (Felis catus) Predation and the Future Direction of Cat Management in New Zealand.

Animals (Basel)

Royal New Zealand Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, 3047 Great North Road, New Lynn, Auckland 0610, New Zealand.

Published: July 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • A study in New Zealand found that 78% of the public supports a National Cat Management Strategy to address issues related to cat predation on wildlife.
  • Concerns were highest for feral cats affecting both native and non-native species, with significant worry regarding stray and owned cats as well.
  • Over 65% of participants supported measures like limits on cat ownership, cat restriction zones, compulsory microchipping, registration, and de-sexing, indicating a strong preference for management strategies in dealing with the cat population.

Article Abstract

Cat predation is a prominent issue in New Zealand that provokes strong and opposing views. We explored, via 1011 face-to-face questionnaires, public opinion on (a) support for a National Cat Management Strategy (78% support); (b) concern regarding predation of wildlife by owned and un-owned cats (managed stray, unmanaged stray, and feral cats); (c) the acceptability of management techniques for owned cats; and (d) the acceptability of population management techniques for un-owned cats. The highest concern was expressed regarding the predation of non-native and native wildlife by feral cats (60 and 86% repectively), followed by unmanaged stray cats (59 and 86% respectively), managed stray cats (54 and 82% respectively), and finally owned cats (38 and 69% repectively). Limits to the number of cats owned and cat restriction zones received high levels of support (>65%), and compulsory microchipping, Council registration, and de-sexing were supported by the majority (>58%). Public support of population control methods for unowned cats was explored, and the influence of participant demographic variables on responses is described. These findings provide insight into public opinion regarding the management of cats in New Zealand, which should be considered during the development of legislation in this area.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5532564PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani7070049DOI Listing

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