Broader adoption of keeping cats safe at home would have large benefits for cat welfare, human health, local wildlife and even the economy. So, should cat owners be required to keep their pets contained to their property?

The answer to the question is obviously “yes”.

      • AJ Sadauskas
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        010 months ago

        @trk @TassieTosser Knox City Council in outer-eastern Melbourne did exactly this: https://www.knox.vic.gov.au/whats-happening/news/keeping-your-cats-safe-and-secured .

        The council did it because some of its suburbs (The Basin, Ferntree Gully, Upper Ferntree Gully, parts of Boronia, Lysterfield) border national parks and the Dandenong Ranges.

        Younger cats can adapt to living indoors.

        But the challenge was with older cats, who are used to roaming around.

        The happy medium would be to phase it in over five to 10 years, where any new cats registered or adopted after a particular date have to stay indoors, but older cats can continue to roam.

        • @ephemeral_gibbon@aussie.zone
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          310 months ago

          That’s 5-10 years in which it’s really hard to enforce though, as you can’t just have some cat trapping and taking to the pound program. So people would still let them outside you’d have the same problem at the end of your phase out period

  • @naevaTheRat@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    10 months ago

    Benefits for cats: No FIV infections, no car injuries, safe temperatures, no fights, no parasites.

    Benefits for wildlife: no murder, fewer vectors, no loss of habitat to cats

    Benefits for community: no roaming cats triggering sensor lights/setting off other pets/damaging property with claws, no toxo transmission, no digging up poo while gardening/losing plants to cat piss

    Cons to cats: Keepers must provide entertainment

    Cons to keepers: Exercise the level of basic responsibility every other keeper of pets is expected to, or parent with children.

    Issue: Controversial???

    • @nyctre@lemmy.world
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      510 months ago

      Super controversial. I know plenty of people that are against pets indoors altogether.

      Went to a vet specialised in behaviour to help with one of my cats. She insisted that I should let them out.

        • @nyctre@lemmy.world
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          410 months ago

          I never said I was one of those people. I keep my cats indoors. And their mood is fine. One of them won’t leave even if I leave the door open. Takes a few steps outside and chills there.

          • @naevaTheRat@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            -710 months ago

            well there you go, someone was wrong about what cats need to be happy.

            You’d think a vet would be more worried about all the heal problems they pick up outside but I suppose it’s more work for them if mr fluffypaws needs surgery or whatever.

    • TheHolm
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      -1110 months ago

      Try to keep non de-sexed cat indoor. I tried, no way it can work. In the end poor boy lost his balls.

      • Zagorath
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        1710 months ago

        Try to keep non de-sexed cat

        I’mma stop you right there. No, don’t do that.

      • @naevaTheRat@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1310 months ago

        Balls vs literally thousands of wildlife. What a hard decision?

        Letting a desexed cat roam is literally hatred for this land. Do you want more feral cats? desex pets, it’s again basic responsibility.

    • @awwwyissss@lemm.ee
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      710 months ago

      There’s a quote in the body of the post that ends with

      So, should cat owners be required to keep their pets contained to their property?

    • 𝚝𝚛𝚔OP
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      510 months ago

      On desktop you get a preview of the article, which I’ve now included in the heading since I’m guessing it doesn’t display on mobile / in apps.

  • @cro_magnon_gilf@sopuli.xyz
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    10 months ago

    In my neighbourhood in the city, there’s some people who take their cat out in the park on a leash. I’ve done it myself. Though I also let one out on his own. He got spooked by a reindeer and then stayed inside for a whole day lol

    Mainly they were indoor cats though. I don’t think mine killed anything

    • @FluffyPotato@lemm.ee
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      610 months ago

      Walking your cat on a leash is pretty common here. I can’t even remember when I last saw a cat just roaming freely.

  • troed
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    -510 months ago

    We need to genetically modify cats to only hunt rats.

    • 𝚝𝚛𝚔OP
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      1710 months ago

      Good news, they also kill native bush rats!

      … Wait that’s bad news.

      • TheHolm
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        310 months ago

        "We need to genetically modify cats to only hunt introduced rats. " In my area foxes were hunting outdoor cats, so you hardly ever see one. Foxes got baited, and now cats are everywhere. Q is, what is better.

        • 𝚝𝚛𝚔OP
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          110 months ago

          Foxes are also introduced, so I’d say cats everywhere are “better” because there’s half a chance their numbers can be reduced through requirements for owners to contain them.

          Also, cats can be baited too if required. And, IMO, it is at the point where it’s required.

  • @YungOnions@sh.itjust.works
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    -1210 months ago

    I’ve always assumed that a cat would go nuts stuck inside all the time. Maybe I’m wrong but I imagine that most people would view it as cruel.

    • @Riftinducer@aussie.zone
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      2910 months ago

      Cats go nuts at the witching hour anyway, being inside or outside has nothing to do with it.

      Basically, nah, they’re alright inside. They sleep for between 12 to 18 hours a day and get most active at dawn and dusk, so having some way for them to burn off energy with a good cat tree or the like will keep them occupied. And if they want more than that, they will come to you and make their demands known. And if that’s still not enough and you’re willing to put the effort in and do some acclimatising, you could get a second cat and they’ll keep each other occupied.

    • @Baggie@lemmy.zip
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      2710 months ago

      I have two cats, they have never been let outside and they’ve been completely happy. Granted the house is a decent size and we have a lot of things to keep them entertained, but that responsibility comes with the ownership I figure.

    • 𝚝𝚛𝚔OP
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      2610 months ago

      Maybe I’m wrong

      You totally are, but at least now you know

    • @Taleya@aussie.zone
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      1910 months ago

      They don’t if you exercise a modicum of responsibility and actually make the environment one that meets their needs

    • @SuckMyWang@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Well there you have it dumb dumb.

      But seriously I thought cats were like tigers or any other big cat and would prefer an open environment rather than a zoo type setting. At least being able to go outside they get both

      • ExtraPartsLeft
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        710 months ago

        Cats are to tigers as dogs are too wolves. They all would like to roam around freely. We don’t generally want people to let their dogs roam though.

        I have a cat and a dog. The dog gets to go out unsupervised for short periods, but he digs so I mostly go outside with him. I take the cat out several times a day and she wishes I’d let her out more. But I don’t want her killing stuff so I make sure she has plenty of toys and entertainment inside too.

    • @itsmect@monero.town
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      -2210 months ago

      That’s because it is cruel.

      Large numbers always seem terrifying, because our human minds are not made for them. The only way to comprehend them is to compare them to other things - in this case all the ways we humans cause damage to the environment directly. Our suburbs are ecological dead zones already. There is just not much space left between asphalt roads, driveways, and neatly trimmed lawn. It’s definitely the cat that goes outside for one hour a day who is the problem. Right next to plastic straws.

      The real frustrating thing about all this that the companies that exploit our planet to core keep doing their shit (Noooo you cant work from home for your office job, you MUST commute to the city daily, because reasons!) while we fight with our neighbors about things that don’t really matter in the grand scheme of things.

      • @A1kmm@lemmy.amxl.com
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        1110 months ago

        Cars definitely kill wildlife too - estimation methodologies vary, but I’ve seen estimates saying:

        • Vehicles directly kill about 10,000,000 native animals across Australia per annum. That’s not including habitat loss, and doesn’t include insects (birds, reptiles, and mammals only).
        • Pet cats kill about 546,000,000 native animals across Australia per annum. I believe that’s using a similar definition excluding insects.
        • Feral cats kill about 3,000,000,000 native animals across Australia per annum.

        Of course, habit destruction and pollution has a huge impact as well.

        But roaming pet cats legitimately are a major part of the problem. It is possible to simultaneously replace lawns with tree cover, and reduce the burden of cats. That could also feed into a comprehensive policy of tackling stray and feral cat populations - something which is made harder in suburbs due to roaming pet cats.

        As for whether it is cruel: change is a stressor for cats, so a sudden change from outdoor access to indoor-only could increase stress levels, but that is a one-off transition and there could be ways to manage that (for example, by providing a lot of notice of a change and allowing owners to phase out access, or by having a permit system for indoor and outdoor cats, and allowing renewal of existing permits for specific microchipped cats, but no new outdoor cat permits). Outdoor access / hunting outdoors is a form of enrichment for cats, but not the only one possible. Indoor cats can play with toys, and have owners simulate chasing and hunting activities indoors (for example, with ribbons, small balls, chasing cat treats, and so on) to provide similar enrichment. At the same time, the indoors protect cats from stressful situations like encountering or being mauled by dogs, aggressive cats, foxes, brushtail possums, injuries on the roads, and disease.

  • kbin_space_program
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    -4110 months ago

    That its only a symptom of the real problem and won’t actually solve anything.

    The animals they catch are weakened from pesticides.

    • 𝚝𝚛𝚔OP
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      3810 months ago

      The animals they catch are weakened from pesticides.

      Citation needed

        • kbin_space_program
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          -510 months ago

          Equally, before the post-DDT pesticides(when the decline started), housecats didn’t exist, never went outside and never killed anything.

          /s

          Go look at the other reply where I sourced my opinion.

          • @KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            410 months ago

            You don’t think house cats existed before DDT pesticides?

            You don’t think house cats, which have existed for 3600 years, existed before 1874?…

            Do I need to math that math for you?

            • kbin_space_program
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              -110 months ago

              thats my point

              If house cats were actually some kind of living natural disaster, birds would have driven extinct millenia ago. To solely blame housecats for the mass extinction of songbirds that have existed beside them for hundreds to thousands of years without any appreciable population effect is insane.

              Also while DDT has its own host of issues regarding it building up in the food chain, my concern here is the post-DDT ones.

              • @Cypher@lemmy.world
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                210 months ago

                What a genius! You solved it!

                Here I was thinking there are billions more humans than at any other time in history, many of whom have pet cats.

                The increase in house cat numbers is surely unrelated to the increased predation on native wildlife!

                • kbin_space_program
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                  010 months ago

                  No. I am saying it is not solved and that articles like this are skirting the real problem, which is probably pesticides and herbicides.

                  The decrease in bird populations of North America is new phenomenon and has only started some time since 1970. Notably, a lot of the songbirds affected are grassland species that dine on insects, seeds and berries, all of which are covered in or have ingested pesticides at farms. And is known, though not well documented, that insect populations are also plummeting but at a much steeper rate that songbirds.

      • kbin_space_program
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        10 months ago

        Https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8640698/

        1. We didn’t know or study the effects of pesticides in various wild birds. And it varies wildly between species, with chickens not being a good general case. Also that birds are considerably more affected by pesticides than mammals.

        2. Simple logic. Housecats do not have access to deep woods or exist in large populations outside of cities and suburbs in North America, yet the populations are declining there. This implies that they are not the cause of the decline.

        3. This logic is backed up by https://www.birds.cornell.edu/home/bring-birds-back#:~:text=All told%2C the North American bird population is,declined by 53%25%2C or another 720 million birds.

        LWhich points out that it is a multitude of factors and that grassland species(i.e. farmland) are the most affected, with wetland and forest species being less affected.

        1. Further logic is that the decline is a relatively new phenomenon. But housecats killing birds is not new. Therefore something else is behind the decline, and simply keeping cats inside will not fix the issue.
        • 𝚝𝚛𝚔OP
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          10 months ago

          That’s a whole heap of words to say “maybe”. On the other side of the world.

          If you’re happy being a selfish piece of shit, feel free to leave your cat roam. When Mittens gets hit by a car / contracts feline aids / otherwise meets a premature death, you can rest easy knowing that akshually it was probably pesticides.

          • kbin_space_program
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            -310 months ago

            Say you didn’t understand what any of those papers said without saying you didn’t understand what those papers said.

            • @Riftinducer@aussie.zone
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              910 months ago

              I mean, he doesn’t have to say it, your comment and the sources did a good job suggesting you only did a cursory read yourself.

              1. The first paper states that birds are less sensitive to pyrethroid based pesticides, which makes your broad statements about pesticides sketchy at best.

              2. Simple logic doesn’t work in science specifically because it’s simple and is subject to internal biases. You can’t make an assumption and appeal to intuitive reasoning without some evidence to draw that link.

              3. Your second paper doesn’t back up your claim. It states that bird population loss is a multifaceted problem. Yes, pesticide use is called out as a factor, but so too is habitat loss through urbanisation and unregulated harvesting practices, which kind of answers your point 4.

              4. These are all American sources. As a result, very little of this is applicable to the Australian biosphere beyond the most broad strokes since they dont take into account differences in local food webs, urban planning, environmental legislation etc.

              TLDR, someone is using irrelevant sources and their dislike of pesticides to justify keeping their cats outside

              • kbin_space_program
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                -510 months ago

                No it absolutely doesnt.

                It absolutely states that birds are considersbly more at risk, and that we dont know how by how much. Try reading more than the intro next time.

                I said that cats arent the problem, they’re a symptom of it. That is a definition of a multifacted problem. That paper absolutely says the same thing.

                The reality is that you could keep every housecat inside and it would not stop the decline.

                • 𝚝𝚛𝚔OP
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                  10 months ago

                  “There’s a possibility that some other factor may play a part in offsetting one of the negative impacts of free-range cats… therefore, all other positives of containing pets may be completely ignored”
                  - You, 2024

  • @yopla@jlai.lu
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    -4210 months ago

    Billions of bird die each year because of windows, go fight that battle instead. ;)