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Cats Indoors!
The Campaign for Safer Birds and Cats
The Problem
There are more than 90 million
pet cats in the U.S., the majority of which roam outside at
least part of the time. In addition, millions of stray and
feral cats roam our cities, suburbs, and rural areas.
Scientists estimate that free-roaming cats kill hundreds of
millions of birds, small mammals, reptiles and amphibians each
year. Cat predation is an added stress to wildlife populations
already struggling to survive habitat loss, pollution,
pesticides, and other human impacts (see: Domestic
Cat Predation On Birds And Other Wildlife). Free-roaming
cats are also exposed to injury, disease, parasites, getting
hit by cars, or becoming lost, stolen, or poisoned. Millions
of domestic cats are euthanized each year because there are
not enough homes for them. Cats can also transmit diseases and
parasites such as rabies, cat-scratch fever, and toxoplasmosis
to other cats, wildlife or people (see: The
Great Outdoors Is No Place For Cats).
The Solution
In 1997, American Bird
Conservancy (ABC) launched the Cats Indoors! Campaign
for Safer Birds and Cats to educate cat owners, decision
makers, and the general public that cats, wildlife and people
all benefit when cats are kept indoors, in an outdoor
enclosure, or trained to go outside on a harness and leash.
ABC developed many education materials, including fact
sheets, posters,
the popular brochure, Keeping
Cats Indoors Isn’t Just For The Birds, an Educator’s
Guide for Grades K-6, print and radio Public
Service Announcements (PSAs), and more.
What You Can Do
Join thousands of supporters and
conduct a Cats Indoors! education campaign in your
community using the materials ABC has developed. Involve
conservation groups, humane societies, veterinarians, animal
control agencies, county and state parks and wildlife agencies
in the effort (see: Conducting
A Cats Indoors! Campaign In Your Community).
For information on converting
your outdoor cats to indoor cats, see the fact sheet: How
to Make Your Outdoor Cat a Happy Indoor Cat. Also spay or
neuter your cats before they can produce an un-wanted litter,
and never abandon cats you cannot care for. Instead, find them
a new home or take them to an animal shelter where they can be
adopted. For a directory of humane societies and animal
shelters near you, see the National Shelter Directory.
- Contact your local media and ask them to
run the print and radio Public
Service Announcements (PSAs).
- Organize a children’s poster competition
for National Keep Your Cat Indoors Day held every year on
the second Saturday in May in conjunction with International
Migratory Bird Day.
- Work for cat control ordinances in your
city or county. See Get
the Facts About Cat Laws and City
of Aurora, Colorado Cat Restraint Law)
- Link your organization’s web site to
ours
- Run an article on the issue in your
organization’s newsletter.
- Ask your state wildlife agency to adopt
the Campaign and distribute materials.
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| Cats kill millions of
birds in the U.S. each year. Photo: Gil
Ewing |
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| Wildlife predation by
free- roaming and stray cats is a serious conservation
issue. Photo: Marge Gibson |
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