Journalists Need To Stop Citing The Bunk Studies Blaming Cats For Annihilating Wildlife

Free-ranging cats do have a negative impact on wildlife, but we’re not going to solve the problem by demonizing them and culling them by the millions.

The Literary Hub story starts off with a provocative question: what if cats ruled the world?

This is a question I find amusing to ponder, so instantly my mind was filled with images of cats scandalizing foreign heads of state by insouciantly swiping gifts off tables, angering diplomats by yawning and nodding off during summits, and financing the construction of massive and unnecessary coastal walls, on the off chance the ocean decides to move inland and get them wet.

Then the writer cited the repeatedly-debunked “study” that credulous media of all stripes still reference without bothering to read the text — that infamous 2013 Nature Communications paper, published by birders who author books with titles like “Cat Wars: The Consequences Of A Cuddly Killer.”

Some journalists don’t know any better, some are overworked, and some are frankly too lazy to read the study with a critical eye, but I think one of the more likely reasons people continue to cite the paper is because it’s easier to blame felinekind for wildlife extirpation than it is to admit we’re the primary culprits. After all, according to the WWF’s most recent annual review, we’ve killed off 73 percent of Earth’s wildlife since 1970, and we certainly didn’t need house cats to help us push elephants, rhinos, every species of higher non-human primate, and innumerable other species to the brink of extinction.

We did that. We did it with our relentless development, consuming and fracturing wild habitats. We did it with careless industrialization, by dumping chemicals and garbage into our rivers and lakes until more than half of them were rendered too polluted to swim in or drink from. We did it by bulldozing old growth forest and jungle, by exploiting species for fur, folk medicine, ivory, sport hunting and in the illegal wildlife trade.

Cheetahs are critically endangered, and they’re being driven to extinction even faster by poachers, who sell them to wealthy buyers in oil-rich gulf states where they’re trendy pets. Credit: Riccardo Parretti/Pexels

More than 47,000 species — that we know of — are headed toward extinction. It’s so much easier to blame it on anyone or anything else than admit we need to make major changes to our lifestyles and policies.

But don’t take my word for it. Here’s what Alley Cat Allies has to say about the 2013 meta-analysis and its derivative papers:

The Smithsonian-funded study published in Nature Communications is not rigorous science.
It is a literature review that surveys a variety of unrelated, older studies and concocts a highly speculative conclusion that suits the researchers’ seemingly desperate anti-cat agenda. This speculative research is highly dangerous. It is being used by opponents of outdoor cats and Trap-Neuter-Return (including the authors) to further an agenda to kill more cats and roll back decades of progress on TNR. And it is being spread unchecked by the media.

Here’s what a group of ethicists and anthropologists wrote about the claims against cats in the journal Conservation Biology, lamenting the lack of nuance and danger in arguing that cats must be stopped “by any means necessary.” The drive to blame felines, they argue, has “fueled an unwarranted moral panic over cats”:

“Contrary to Loss and Marra’s claims that the scientific consensus is consistent with their views that cats are a global threat to biodiversity, the actual scientific consensus is that cats can, in certain contexts, have suppressive population-level effects on some other species (Twardek et al. 2017). This is something that is true of all predators, native or not (Wallach et al. 2010). Thus, cats should not be profiled as a general threat a priori and without reference to important factors of ecological context, situational factors, clear definition of harms, and evidence thereof.”

“There are there are serious reasons to suspect the reliability of the new, extreme cat-killer statistics,” wrote Barbara J. King, retired chairwoman of the department of anthropology at The College of William and Mary.

Feline predatory impact varies by local conditions. Free-ranging cats in cities and suburbs kill rodents, but have minimal impact on other animals, data shows. Credit: Patricia Luquet/Pexels

Like we’ve often noted here on PITB, the authors of the Nature Communications study can’t even say how many free-ranging felines exist in the US. They say it’s between 20 and 120 million. That’s a 100 million difference in the potential cat population! How can they tell us how many birds and mammals are killed by cats if they can’t even tell us how many cats there are? No amount of massaging the numbers can provide an accurate picture if the initial data is shaky or nonexistent.

Furthermore, the nature of a meta-analysis means the authors depend on earlier studies for estimates on predatory impact, but the 2013 Nature Communications paper does not include any data —not a single study — on feline predatory impact. In other words, they have no idea how many animals free-ranging cats actually kill.

In authentic studies that actually do measure predatory impact, the data varies widely in geographic and demographic context. Data derived from the D.C. Cat Count, for example, shows that cats living more than 800 feet from forested areas rarely kill wildlife, and are much more likely to kill rodents.

Those who cite the bunk study and its derivatives are “demonizing cats with shaky statistics,” King wrote, adding she was alarmed by “an unsettling degree of uncertainty in the study’s key numbers.”

Free-roaming populations are reduced when cat colonies are managed, and the animals are fed and fixed. Credit: Mia X/Pexels

Ultimately, we agree with Wayne Pacelle, former president of the Humane Society of the United States.

The meta-analysis authors “have thrown out a provocative number for cat predation totals, and their piece has been published in a highly credible publication, but they admit the study has many deficiencies. We don’t quarrel with the conclusion that the impact is big, but the numbers are informed guesswork.”

Cats do have a negative impact on wildlife, it varies according to local circumstances, and those of us who love cats have a responsibility to keep our pets indoors and help manage free-ranging populations.

But cooler heads must prevail, approaches to managing cats must be evidence-based, and the effort requires people of all kinds working together — which becomes much more difficult when agenda-driven pseudoacademics whip people into a frenzy by portraying felines as bloodthirsty, invasive monsters who need to be wiped out “by any means necessary.”

When that kind of rhetoric drives public policy, you get countries like Australia killing two million cats by air-dropping poisoned sausages, vigilantes gunning down cats with shotguns in public parks, and local governments offering cash prizes to children who shoot the most cats and kittens. Those efforts aren’t just cruel and inhuman, there’s not a shred of proof that they do a damn thing to help other species.

Solving the problem of free-ranging cats requires us to own up to our own role in species extinction and to take measured, evidence-based steps to protect vulnerable wildlife. Otherwise, we’re inflicting a whole lot of suffering on sentient creatures and accomplishing absolutely nothing.

17 thoughts on “Journalists Need To Stop Citing The Bunk Studies Blaming Cats For Annihilating Wildlife”

  1. They always discount anecdotal evidence but IMO they should not. We have two ferals in the yard now, we’ve had as many as about 5, in the past. We’ve seen zero bird kills and no feathers on the ground indicating a bird was killed and eaten. The birds swoop down and eat the cat food. We have birds because we let trees and bushes grow. When the tornado knocked down all the trees in 2011, we had no birds for awhile.

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    1. Hi Leah. Same here. My feral Bootsy kills rats but very rarely birds. He is afraid of my two squirrels so i can feed them. Even my new addition baby black squirrel Coal he runs away from. Know what kills me? My colony nearby that all passed away over the years killed rats but there were complaints about them because i fed them. Now that there are no more ferals and rats they complain about the rats. To the people who gave me grief about feeding them? 🖕🖕🖕🖕

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    2. The people who are pushing these studies could also, I don’t know, actually do original research?

      Yes, it requires more effort than sitting in an office playing with numbers, writing articles about how destructive cats are, and hawking books, but absent actual data, there’s no way to know what works and what doesn’t. At the very least, we need baselines so we know if “corrective” measures have any impact.

      Liked by 1 person

    3. Tried to reply above and couldn’t make it work … I hope you do not shut down PITB. I sure hope you’ll reconsider. I don’t have time yet today but will write more later.

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  2. You wrote to M “I’m shutting PITB down too.” Hope you’re not serious. One blog ain’t gonna change the world, but the messages you post do help to inspire and inform those of us who care to keep up the fight. Cats need their friends to be vocal!

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    1. I was in a bad mood last night, my news alerts were full of stories about cats being abused, neglected and shot, there were more stories about that extremely disturbing Chinese online cat torture ring, and all the other awful things people do to animals. Bud was sick, the Yankees lost to the Red Sox, I was annoyed that I hadn’t heard back after a job interview…

      Just one of those days. But I do need to take a hard look at what I’m doing here with the site.

      Thank you for the kind words.

      Liked by 2 people

      1. News alerts, by their very nature, are about the extraordinary rather than the ordinary. Terrible things happen, and will continue to happen, but they are not the norm – if they were, they would go unreported. The important thing is that decent people remain strong, and continue to fight for what is right. “We shall overcome, someday”.

        Hope little Bud is feeling better, and that you get the job you’re looking for. Stay strong, my friend.

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      2. Indeed, but the online cat torture ring is now global and the stuff I read gave me nightmares, that’s how disturbing it is. As for the rest of it, it’s diseased American culture expressed through behavior and it’s becoming disturbingly ordinary. Even compared to a few years ago, the number of reports is startling.

        But you’re absolutely right, the way to combat it is to counter it with decency. Thanks, P.

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  3. Indeed, the researchers should be doing the better research as you describe it. Just sayin’ that when we’ve watched more and more wild land being developed for decades, we’ve gained, or should have gained, some knowledge of habitat loss being the actual cause of loss of all species of wildlife. Especially noticeable when the EF4 deforested a path through our area in an instant.

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  4. Thank you for writing this article! Cats have been demonized by environmentalists, conservationists, and wildlife organizations. There are endless articles written about the dangers of cats. You’d think cats have single handedly ruined the environment. Cats don’t live in forests, plains or mountains where the majority of wildlife lives yet somehow they managed this tremendous feat. Keep informing the public about the truth. Maybe someday they will realize cats are not the villains that they are made out to be.

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    1. It really is extraordinary to see how much cats are blamed, how credulous the press has been on this issue, and the ways it’s impacted public policy by providing people with a justification for killing innocent animals.

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      1. It is so infuriating and I feel so bad for these poor cats that don’t deserve the hate. If cats are mentioned on FB or anywhere online a choir of haters post how bad cats are for the ecosystem ect. Someone told me that when Cuomo was the governor he was going to give help to rescuers of ferals in NYC, but once The Audubon Society got to him he changed his mind. I don’t know if that’s true, but I do know that The Audubon Society has managed to brainwash a lot of the public with their unrelenting cat hate.

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  5. In our neighborhood, I’m guessing that the cats are as likely to end up as prey as to be the killer. We have an incredibly large raptor population for some reason.

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