Tags for Forum Posts: foxes
At least your Missing posters stayed up. Mine were removed by some jobsworth about three weeks after I put them up. Is there a council policy?
My Eliza has gone, I am reconciled to that, she was not well and would not have lived this six weeks without her drugs. But I'd like to find the body, still. Hadn't thought that a fox may have taken her, a more real possibility than the urban-myth vivisectionists and fur-traders. And OAE.
She was a long-ish haired tabby. She can't still be alive as she's not had her drugs since mid-November.
I live in Seven Sisters so not in Harringay catchment.
She was chipped so any contact with a vet etc means I would have heard. No, she went off and died (or Foxy got her), she never travelled far before. I reckon that in the spring someone will find her bones tucked away under a shed or something. Sick animals run from the pain and seek shelter and a hiding place. She had a heart problem that meant she was on diuretic drugs, she will not have survived without them. Two things I wish - that I had put a collar on her, and that I had taken her to the vet earlier (she was due a routine check shortly) and he would have told me she was very sick and I would have euthanased her then, instead of this not knowing.
But we had ten good years, and her last year was extra to what she would have had in 'real life'.
'The Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute, recruited a network of backyard birders named Neighborhood Nestwatch to help study the fortunes of baby catbirds in neighborhoods in Bethesda and Takoma Park.
The researchers tracked spring nestlings with radio transmitters. In the neighborhoods with a lot of cats, 80 to 90 percent of the fledglings died, most of them killed by cats. In the other areas, about 50 percent died, a rate found in nature, he said. The results suggest that catbirds in cat-heavy areas are not able to reproduce at a rate that is sustainable.'
Right, let's hear it for the boids! Why shouldn't cats be muzzled, just like pitbulls?
Only problem with the Washington Post article is the headline: 'Roaming cats decimating bird populations'. That would be just 10% of fledglings as catkill, rather than 90%. The linguistic equivalent of the grey squirrel - but I suppose it's not as bad as Wayne Rooney's 'The World Cup decimated me.'
If everyone kept their cats indoors between dusk and dawn, a better chance for the boids to breed/less risk of foxes snaffling pet moggies. Two birds, one stone.
Kit* this article may interest you.It's about the cataclysmic effect cats are having upon aboriginal fauna/flora of australia. I saw a documentory about it recently and there is absolutely nothing anyone can do about it. In most australian states it's the law to keep your cat indoors dusk to dawn.
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