Cats And Foxes In Australia Are Killing 2.6 Billion Animals Every Year — Driving Many Species To Extinction

Vinson

Well-known member
Nov 24, 2023
1,464
1,173
113
Time to make it right

Domestic and feral cats along with invasive foxes have contributed to the extinction of at least 25 mammals once native to Australia.

When foxes were introduced into the Australian wilderness in 1845, they were released for leisurely sport hunting. Cats, meanwhile, have given millions of Aussies unconditional companionship. According to new research, however, the two predators kill 2.6 billion animals per year — driving many species to extinction.

This predation annually eliminates 697 million reptiles, 510 million birds, and 1.4 billion small mammals. Domestic cats alone are killing 500 million animals per year. This trend, centuries in the making, is spurring the decline and extinction of several species.

“This enormous death toll is one of the key reasons Australia’s biodiversity is suffering major declines,” the study’s authors wrote in The Conversation.

“Cats and foxes, for example, have played a big role in most of Australia’s 34 mammal extinctions, including the desert rat-kangaroo which rapidly declined once foxes reached their region,” they continued.

Published in the Diversity and Distributions journal, the study was led by Dr. Alyson Stobo-Wilson of Charles Darwin University. It alarmingly detailed how cats and foxes are decimating Australian wildlife and how essential it is to manage these predators — before a whole variety of unique creatures vanishes forever.

Cats are just as non-native to Australia as foxes and were brought to the continent by colonizers in the 1800s. At least 100 unique flora and fauna species have been fully eradicated since both of these creatures arrived. Unfortunately, the spread of their habitat only complicates the problem.

Dr. Stobo-Wilson and her peers noted that Australia’s 1.7 million foxes can be found in 80 percent of mainland territory, particularly in the continent’s forested southern regions. Naturally, cats are far more prevalent because of their status as charming pets. As a result, there are currently 6.6 million of them across Australia — covering 99.9 percent of the continent.

It’s no surprise that foxes prey on larger animals than cats and devour kangaroos, potoroos, and wallabies with ease. While cats tend to focus on smaller animals, however, they’re destroying far more species and eat five times as many reptiles, two-and-a-half times as many birds, and twice as many mammals as foxes.

“We need to deal with this problem of foxes and cats. People think that a couple of cats and foxes aren’t having an impact, but it adds up,” said Dr. Stobo-Wilson. “If we don’t do something about the predation pressure, we will lose more species.”

Unfortunately, animals like bettongs and quolls are targets of both predators alike. Co-author Sarah Legge, a wildlife ecologist at Australian National University, noted that “the poor buggers in the middle are getting a double whammy” of death as a result.

“Management of domestic cats is a huge issue,” John Read, an ecologist at the University of Adelaide, told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. “Keeping cats contained helps prevent those environmental and health impacts and stops them getting out and breeding more feral cats.”

Overall, the lack of stringent management of cats and foxes has seen species like the central rock rat driven to the brink of extinction. Legge has estimated that it only has 20 years left on the planet, provided thorough measures aren’t taken. The eastern barred bandicoot, meanwhile, currently only exists in fenced protection.

Ultimately, the dire warning issued by this study isn’t particularly new. Government officials announced plans to kill two million feral cats by airdropping poisonous sausage three years ago. However, this latest research is the first study to quantify just how much of an impact cats and foxes have made on the environment.

“In the last 10 years, Australia has lost three species of mammals,” said David Lindenmayer, an ecologist at Australian National University. “It’s not as if the rate of loss is slowing, in many cases that decline is increasing.”

Dr. Stobo-Wilson did note that measures such as fenced enclosures and culling have proven to be successful — but that more needs to be done. For her, these approaches must be ramped up, continent-wide, in order to produce any notable long-term effects. Ultimately, she and her peers put it rather plainly:

“Australia must drastically scale up the management of both predators, to give native wildlife a fighting chance and to help prevent future extinctions.”

 

jeff2

Well-known member
Sep 11, 2004
1,566
848
113
These invasive species are a big problem. I know rats have ruined many islands. I saw a documentary where a lizard just let the rat eat it because it never had competition before on an island. And then there is the Lion fish.
 
Last edited:

Robert Mugabe

Well-known member
Nov 5, 2017
9,427
6,436
113
They gotta eat to.
Survival of the fittest.
Not when they're imported.
Saw a bit on Guam years ago. A local was showing how in the forest, it was dead silent. Whereas before the forest was full of the sound of song birds. Somebody accidentally imported the brown tree snake. Twenty years later the birds were gone. Happens everywhere. Hawaii. Australia. and on and on.
 

Mr Deeds

Muff Diver Extraordinaire
Mar 10, 2013
6,316
3,477
113
Here
You can send a few people from Springfield there I guess🙂
 

kherg007

Well-known member
May 3, 2014
9,034
7,060
113
Knew a bloke from the army whose job was shooting cats out of the trees in Queensland. Just go out at night, shine the torch at the trees, look for the reflections of the eyes, aim between them, and w a .22 clean out the tree.
 

Insidious Von

My head is my home
Sep 12, 2007
39,867
7,337
113
The Quattrocazzi Outfit is protecting Australia's little penguins from being lunch for foxes.

 

Twister

Well-known member
Aug 24, 2002
4,656
421
83
GTA
I saw a cat the other day in the back yard that was walking around with a squirrel by the throat.
 

Ref

Committee Member
Oct 29, 2002
5,118
1,046
113
web.archive.org
I saw a cat the other day in the back yard that was walking around with a squirrel by the throat.

Cats are natures perfect killing machines, even better than man.

A comparison of the senses of a cat vs. a dog and the cat has a better sense of smell, hearing and sight. ( https://www.midoricide.com/blogs/mi..._HYLH6zytfS8JTl9DSzzp6vAn3TJEliQp2OvEjGwTF0wq )

Hunting instincts: Cats have a strong hunting instinct that's hardwired into their brains. They're triggered by the sight and sound of prey, such as birds or mice.

Hunting behavior: Cats are obligate carnivores, meaning they need to eat meat to survive. They hunt alone and typically catch small prey, such as birds and small mammals. However, some cats can also catch larger prey, like rabbits.

Hunting impact: Cats can have a significant impact on local wildlife. A study of pet cats in Australia found that each roaming cat kills an average of 186 native species per year. Another study found that house cats have a bigger impact on local wildlife than wild predators.

Hunting enrichment: Keeping indoor cats engaged and entertained is important for their happiness. You can encourage your cat to play by giving them opportunities to hunt.

Hunting sounds: Cats make a chattering sound when they're in hunting mode. This sound is caused by special jaw movements.

I have one cat in my house and he owns it. If a mouse gets in, it is only a matter of time before it is caught, tortured, left to die and presented to me as a trophy. He will out wait a mouse for hours.

He is also extremely loyal and loving, he will run to the door when people arrive and sniff them over, he plays fetch (and other games) and meows when he wants to be fed or let out. I can also go away for days and he is fine as long as I leave food out and a source of water.

An amazing creature to watch.
 

Robert Mugabe

Well-known member
Nov 5, 2017
9,427
6,436
113
Cats are natures perfect killing machines, even better than man.

A comparison of the senses of a cat vs. a dog and the cat has a better sense of smell, hearing and sight. ( https://www.midoricide.com/blogs/mi..._HYLH6zytfS8JTl9DSzzp6vAn3TJEliQp2OvEjGwTF0wq )

Hunting instincts: Cats have a strong hunting instinct that's hardwired into their brains. They're triggered by the sight and sound of prey, such as birds or mice.

Hunting behavior: Cats are obligate carnivores, meaning they need to eat meat to survive. They hunt alone and typically catch small prey, such as birds and small mammals. However, some cats can also catch larger prey, like rabbits.

Hunting impact: Cats can have a significant impact on local wildlife. A study of pet cats in Australia found that each roaming cat kills an average of 186 native species per year. Another study found that house cats have a bigger impact on local wildlife than wild predators.

Hunting enrichment: Keeping indoor cats engaged and entertained is important for their happiness. You can encourage your cat to play by giving them opportunities to hunt.

Hunting sounds: Cats make a chattering sound when they're in hunting mode. This sound is caused by special jaw movements.

I have one cat in my house and he owns it. If a mouse gets in, it is only a matter of time before it is caught, tortured, left to die and presented to me as a trophy. He will out wait a mouse for hours.

He is also extremely loyal and loving, he will run to the door when people arrive and sniff them over, he plays fetch (and other games) and meows when he wants to be fed or let out. I can also go away for days and he is fine as long as I leave food out and a source of water.

An amazing creature to watch.
I am a cat lover. But they do kill a lot of wildlife. I noticed when our male Siamese was inside the house and he saw birds through the window he would make that chattering sound. We used to let him go out. Though I don't think he killed much. One day we came home and a small mouse was in the living room standing up in a corner "assuming the position". Our two cats hadn't noticed it. We rescued it from what must have been it's longest ordeal day, to set it free outside for something else to kill it.