Cat Wars: The Devastating Consequences of a Cuddly Killer

Cat Wars: The Devastating Consequences of a Cuddly Killer

Cat Wars: The Devastating Consequences of a Cuddly Killer

Cat Wars: The Devastating Consequences of a Cuddly Killer

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Overview

Why our cats are a danger to species diversity and human health

In 1894, a lighthouse keeper named David Lyall arrived on Stephens Island off New Zealand with a cat named Tibbles. In just over a year, the Stephens Island Wren, a rare bird endemic to the island, was rendered extinct. Mounting scientific evidence confirms what many conservationists have suspected for some time—that in the United States alone, free-ranging cats are killing birds and other animals by the billions. Equally alarming are the little-known but potentially devastating public health consequences of rabies and parasitic Toxoplasma passing from cats to humans at rising rates. Cat Wars tells the story of the threats free-ranging cats pose to biodiversity and public health throughout the world, and sheds new light on the controversies surrounding the management of the explosion of these cat populations.

This compelling book traces the historical and cultural ties between humans and cats from early domestication to the current boom in pet ownership, along the way accessibly explaining the science of extinction, population modeling, and feline diseases. It charts the developments that have led to our present impasse—from Stan Temple's breakthrough studies on cat predation in Wisconsin to cat-eradication programs underway in Australia today. It describes how a small but vocal minority of cat advocates has campaigned successfully for no action in much the same way that special interest groups have stymied attempts to curtail smoking and climate change.

Cat Wars paints a revealing picture of a complex global problem—and proposes solutions that foresee a time when wildlife and humans are no longer vulnerable to the impacts of free-ranging cats.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781400882878
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Publication date: 08/29/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 216
Sales rank: 864,349
File size: 8 MB

About the Author

Peter P. Marra has written more than 175 scientific publications, is the coeditor of Birds of Two Worlds, and directs the Smithsonian Migratory Bird Center. Chris Santella is the author of many books, including the Fifty Places travel and outdoor series and The Tug Is the Drug. His writing has appeared in such publications as the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the New Yorker, and Trout.

Read an Excerpt

Cat Wars

The Devastating Consequences of a Cuddly Killer


By Peter P. Marra, Chris Santella

PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS

Copyright © 2016 Peter P. Marra and Chris Santella
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-4008-8287-8



CHAPTER 1

The Obituary of the Stephens Island Wren

No matter how much the cats fight, there always seem to be plenty of kittens.

— Abraham Lincoln


Rising high from the Marlborough Sound into the Maori sky off the South Island of New Zealand is Stephens Island. The island lies two miles from the mainland and fifty-five miles from Wellington, is no bigger than a quarter of a square mile, is taller than it is wide, and has peaks reaching almost 1,000 feet. Like all of the islands of the region, Stephens Island has short, craggy, and almost impenetrable vegetation, likely because the land is guilty of trying to stop the strong and persistent southeasterly winds sweeping in from the Antarctic Continent. According to historical accounts, landing on the island was so treacherous that few people had ever stepped foot on its shores, which left it largely pristine. In fact, the island had likely stood in place for millions of years without human impact; if the Maori people had ever visited, they left no trace. Anglo explorations of the island began in the 1870s, led by New Zealand maritime officials who had determined that a lighthouse installation was needed to ensure safe passage through nearby channels. Several hundred people had lost their lives in three major shipwrecks in the mid-1800s in New Zealand, so lighthouse construction had become a priority. By the early 1890s a lighthouse and several modest homes had been erected on Stephens Island for three lighthouse keepers and their families to share. With little human companionship, lighthouse keepers would often bring cats with them to their island outposts. As one story goes, a cat, possibly named Tibbles, made it to Stephens Island and was allowed to roam free.

David Lyall liked his solitude. He was literate, fit, and orderly, but, most important, he could keep a paraffin lantern burning cleanly. Lyall was cautiously excited about his new position as an assistant lighthouse keeper for New Zealand Maritime. It was January 1894, and he would be one of seventeen people at this new outpost. Being a lighthouse keeper in the late 1800s was not an easy job, although the primary duty — keeping the light burning bright and clean — was straightforward, requiring a constant trimming of the wick to maximize the flame and reduce the smoke. Many lives were in the keeper's hands: A rock near an island on a coal-black night could tear through the wooden belly of a ship in a matter of seconds, meaning an almost certain death for sailors. Many sailors at the time could not swim and, ironically, hated water — especially the frigid subantarctic waters enveloping the southern islands of New Zealand.

The challenge of being a lighthouse keeper was one of endurance — enduring rough weather, the claustrophobically small community, the lack of fresh food, and most of all the isolation. Lighthouse keepers received new provisions from the mainland only twice a month. To bolster their larder, they might keep cows for fresh milk, sheep for wool, chickens for eggs. They might garden a bit if the soil and weather permitted. Lyall was not daunted by these challenges. He had a wife and at least one son, so he needed to make a fair wage. He was also eager to pursue his passions, even if doing so meant life on an isolated island. Lyall loved animals and had an insatiable curiosity for natural history and especially for watching birds. An amateur ornithologist, he was especially eager to study the avifauna of the island and envisioned perhaps even preparing some bird specimens for museums.

Lyall likely was preoccupied at an early age with a need for order, and this would have contributed to a need to name and classify everything he saw in nature. In his passion for animals and their nomenclature, Lyall probably found comfort and an explanation for how nature worked. It was like solving a puzzle, revealing something previously unknown, and providing order to a natural landscape that appeared to be in disorder. Lyall was a self-taught naturalist, drawing most of his understanding from the few books that were available on the natural history of New Zealand (field guides had yet to be invented). He may have found inner peace in nature, through watching birds and their behaviors, and identifying and ascribing names to existing species. Lyall also probably found an inherent value in nature that he could not quantify, justify, or even articulate. He was blindly focused on getting to his new post on the largely unexplored and uninhabited island, a place where he could finally pursue his passions. He envisioned spending long nights deep in thought, identifying specimens of plants, insects, and birds, burning through large amounts of paraffin oil — all while supporting his family.

Lyall would find the perfect study species for his avian interests in the Stephens Island Wren, then undescribed but eventually to be named Xenicus (Traversia) lyalli. Except for feathers and eggs, the Stephens Island Wren bore more resemblance to a mouse than a bird. It lived a hobbit-like existence, foraging in logs and even in underground burrows and boulder piles. Some accounts even suggest the wren was semi-nocturnal. Equipped with large feet and a short tail, it ran low to the ground among the shoreline rocks or jumped from branch to branch through thick tangles of knotty shrubs. It flapped its vestigial wings to help on the occasional long jump — perhaps its closest approximation to flight. Nearly everything about this species made it wren-like, though it was not actually a member of the wren family (we will continue to refer to it as a wren), but instead was a member of the endemic New Zealand family Acanthisittidae. It was one of only three flightless species of songbirds in the world. It did not need to fly. There was no need to leave the island or the ground for long — food was available throughout the year, and the species could breed on the island. More important, there were no predators. Flying requires trade-offs with other costly adaptations, and because there was no need to escape or migrate, this small wren, weighing little more than a large coin, lost its ability to fly.

The Stephens Island Wren was millions of years in the making. Enormous evolutionary changes in natural history and biology had occurred over time, generation after generation, to make it unique. Each year wrens nested, laid eggs, raised young — sometimes more, sometimes less, depending on the quality of the mate, the amount of food available, the climate, or some complex mix of all these things. The species' size, color, and shape changed at varying speeds over time, sometimes at a glacial pace, sometimes more rapidly. But this species, like all species of plants and animals, changed at a pace to fit the landscape — the biological, climatic, and geological landscape — all through the process of natural selection. A story told over and over again, all over the planet, for thousands, hundreds of thousands, even hundreds of millions of years. In contrast with the slow pace with which the process of speciation can proceed, the reverse process of species extinction can occur with astonishing speed.


* * *

New Zealand itself is a nation of islands, an archipelago made up of two large landmasses, the South Island and the North Island, surrounded by an array of smaller islands and all isolated from the rest of the world for over 80 million years. Like other small landmasses surrounded by water that have emerged over different time frames — such as the Galápagos, Hawaiian, and Caribbean island archipelagos — New Zealand provides a dramatic example of how the temporal process of species diverging and adapting to their local environment can be seen from place to place. New Zealand is one of the oldest island chains. A dizzying number of endemic species of birds, making up 87 percent of the avifauna, have emerged on New Zealand. Of the thirty-two species of flightless birds, sixteen are now extinct. In addition to the small flightless wrens, the island chain is known for species such as the takahes (flightless rails), the Kakapo (a flightless parrot), and of course the kiwis. At one point, at least nine species of large, wingless ostrich-like birds called moas also inhabited these islands. But by AD 1400, just 250 years after the arrival of the first humans to New Zealand (the Maori), all nine species of moa had gone extinct, due to a combination of overhunting and habitat destruction. By the time Lyall set foot on the shores of Stephens Island, almost a third of New Zealand's unique species were already extinct due to Maori and European settlement, the habitats they destroyed, and the mammalian predators they brought with them.

Before Tibbles's arrival, there had never been a cat on Stephens Island. In fact, there had never been any mammalian predators on the island. Tibbles, along with her litter in utero, was the first to come ashore, early in 1894. A female cat can produce a litter of as many as eight kittens, sometimes more, and if a male is around, she can be impregnated again within days after giving birth. If an unrelated adult male is not around, siblings will eventually mate with one another, or offspring will mate with their mother. Once in estrus, cats will breed rapidly and often, and their populations will grow exponentially if left alone. Cats make the perfect pet for an isolated island inhabitant, in part because they can obtain most of their own food from their surroundings. Lizards, birds, or small mammals provide a sufficient diet. Cats are carnivores and need to consume primarily protein and some fat to stay healthy. They are ambush predators, sitting for long periods, motionless and quiet, waiting for the right time to pounce. They are quick and efficient and excel at what they do — otherwise they die. Cats have retractable, razor-sharp claws that extend from their strong paws to pin down prey. Once the prey is immobilized, cats inflict the kill bite with two sharp canines, usually to the neck, and quickly begin tearing into scales, fur, or feathers. Cats can kill animals as large as rabbits and squirrels, but their primary prey consists of smaller rodents like mice and voles as well as birds the size of (and including) sparrows and wrens. Cats do not always kill out of hunger. They seem to be stimulated by the chase and if not hungry will still kill; cat owners who allow their cat to roam freely may have received a "present" of a bird or mouse, a testament to their pet's predatory competence. Some scientists have postulated that the prey-return behavior serves as a way for an experienced cat to try to teach another cat or perhaps even a human to hunt. Others presume it is done by way of caching food or is perhaps an attempt to bring a once playful toy to a safe place for use another time. Regardless, a single fed or unfed cat can bring home enormous numbers of furry and feathery presents to its owners. Tibbles, once on the island and allowed to roam, doing only what her instinct told her to do, soon began bringing an excited and curious Lyall small birds — probably sometimes whole and sometimes half-eaten.

No one knows what Tibbles was actually like as a companion, or whom she really belonged to. Like most cats, she probably had a fierce independent streak and was under the impression that the lighthouse keepers were there for her enjoyment and companionship rather than the reverse. Tibbles probably was not one to cuddle up on a lap or sleep around a head. As a kitten she was likely as silly and entertaining as any yarn ball–chasing kitten today. Once on the island and allowed to roam, Tibbles likely came and went at will. When not sleeping away long periods of time in the heat of the day, she explored the island, watching everything that moved, contemplating the chase of every twitch. Over time Tibbles probably became more and more wild. Certainly all her progeny were feral. Cats can "go wild" within a generation.


* * *

Scientists do not know whether the Stephens Island Wren was at one time more widely distributed throughout New Zealand. It may be that through the destruction of habitats, combined with the spread of cats and rats, populations of this flightless bird had shriveled, and the isolated inhospitable Stephens Island served as a last refuge for the only remnant population. Fossil evidence points to this idea, but such evidence does not provide a definitive answer because it does not capture genetic or other differences that may have distinguished the Stephens Island Wren from other species. Equally plausible is the idea that fossil wrens found on other islands of New Zealand with physical features similar to the Stephens Island Wren were actually different species. Given the biogeographic history of New Zealand, some populations of the Stephens Island Wren likely were isolated from other populations for millions of years, making this scenario quite plausible.

Typically, it is the combination of morphological and/or genetic differences that are used to delineate different species. The term Biological Species Concept, coined by evolutionary biologist Ernst Mayr, defines a species as a group of individuals that can potentially interbreed in nature. In the trenches of the biology field, this is seldom used as the only criterion for deciding when a population of organisms is a new or separate species. Taxonomists and systematists look at the color, patterns, size, and now the genes themselves to decide whether an animal might actually be a species new to science. These are the traits that develop largely through genetic mutations and/or long periods of reproductive isolation, such as might occur on islands or on the opposite sides of mountain ranges or rivers. Because whole specimens of similar wrens from other regions of New Zealand do not exist in collections, there is no way to know whether these other populations were actually the same species as those preserved from Stephens Island. Without this information, the true distribution of the wren, and all the possible causes of its demise in other New Zealand regions, if it was widely distributed, will never be known.

Nevertheless, a fundamental point is clear: By 1894 no one, including any of New Zealand's most renowned biologists, had recorded seeing the species, and Lyall perceived — having this wren in his hand on Stephens Island — that he was seeing something he had never seen before. Sitting down one evening next to the light that radiated off his paraffin lantern, an excited Lyall started to examine the most recent piles of birds brought home by Tibbles. Most were half-eaten, while others were almost completely intact. Lyall had been on the island only a short time, and thus far he could put a name to most of the specimens. Then he picked up the carcass of one peculiar bird. It was small, olive on the back, pale on the breast, with a scalloped brown fringe to the feathers. It had a narrow white streak above the eye, short wings, and a rather long, decurved brown bill. It reminded Lyall of the Rifleman (Acanthisitta chloris), a similar species of small "wren" common in New Zealand and one he knew quite well. Lyall had likely seen specimen preparation on only a few occasions and had prepared a study skin himself only a couple of times. Nonetheless, he took his scalpel and made an incision along the small bird's reduced breastbone straight down to the top of the belly. He worked his fingers under the skin, slowly pulling skin away from muscle. Eventually he worked his fingers in from either side until his fingers could meet. Using scissors, he snipped the bone just above where the rear end of the carcass attached to the tail and peeled the skin back from the body until he got to the wings. He could see that Tibbles had pierced the abdomen with her canines and had broken one of the wings, perhaps with the first swipe of her paw. He snipped both wing bones and cut the muscle. He continued to pull the carcass away from the skin, exposing the neck, and he quickly snipped that as well and removed the carcass from the skin. Carefully, Lyall peeled the skin over the skull until he could just see the edges of the eye sockets. He snipped a neat square of bone away from the back of the skull and then carefully scooped out the brain. Lyall knew he needed to remove as much tissue as possible from the specimen so it would dry quickly and to avoid a maggot infestation. He went back to work on the eyes and carefully snipped the thin layer of tissue surrounding the pupil, and pulled the eyes out of the skull. He reinverted the skin, which now had a small hole on each side where the eyes had been, back over the skull, and packed the rest of the skin with sheep's wool, re-creating the eyes, neck, and body. He then stitched up the incision and placed the specimen in the window to dry in the sun. Lyall repeated this process several times over the next few months, creating a series of at least fifteen specimens that eventually made their way to prominent ornithologists of the region and time, including Walter Rothschild, Walter Buller, and H. H. Travers (fig. 1.1).


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Cat Wars by Peter P. Marra, Chris Santella. Copyright © 2016 Peter P. Marra and Chris Santella. Excerpted by permission of PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

1 The Obituary of the Stephens Island Wren 1
2 America’s Dairy Land and Its Killing Fields 10
3 The Rise of Bird Lovers and Cat Lovers: The Perfect Storm 29
4 The Science of Decline 49
5 The Zombie Maker: Cats as Agents of Disease 75
6 Taking Aim at the Problem 95
7 Trap-Neuter-Return: A Palatable Solution That Is No Solution At All 121
8 A Landscape with Fewer Free-Ranging Cats: Better for Cats, Better for Birds, Better for People 144
9 What Kind of Nature Awaits? 168
Acknowledgments 179
Notes 181
References 185
Index 201

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

"Very few people enjoy thinking about the calamitous problem of free-roaming cats and biodiversity, and even fewer dare to talk about it openly. Marra and Santella's book is therefore doubly welcome. It's not only important reading for anyone who cares about nature. With its engaging storytelling, its calmly scientific approach, and its compassionate handling of a highly fraught issue, this is also a book that a person might actually read for pleasure."—Jonathan Franzen

"Cats, most of them unowned free-ranging cats, kill as many as four billion birds in the United States each year. What, if anything, should be done about it? Cat Wars tackles this difficult dilemma. If you are a cat lover, a bird lover, a philosopher, an ethicist, or just anyone interested in gut-wrenching dilemmas, you will find this a gripping book."—Jared Diamond, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Guns, Germs, and Steel

"Here, at last, is what native-ecosystem advocates have been waiting for—a complete, dispassionate examination of America's free-ranging cat debacle. It's all here—from the horrendous bird mortality to the cat-borne pathogens blighting wildlife and humans to the cruelty and futility of Trap-Neuter-Return. Everyone gets to speak—including the feral-cat lobby."—Ted Williams, environmental journalist

"The level-tempered approach of Cat Wars will win many advocates. Anyone interested in the broader topics of a healthy environment and healthy human society will benefit from reading this book. It's as powerful as TV ads featuring the ‘crying Indian' in the antilittering campaign of the early 1970s."—Bill Thompson III, editor of Bird Watcher's Digest

"In Cat Wars, Peter Marra and Chris Santella lay out the extraordinary (and extraordinarily devastating) toll that America's favorite pet inflicts on America's favorite birds. At a time when native bird populations are in desperate trouble, and the number of free-ranging cats has never been higher, the authors bring clear-eyed science and commonsense solutions to one of the most polarizing issues in avian conservation. This is an important book, even if the message is not a comfortable one."—Scott Weidensaul, author of Living on the Wind: Across the Hemisphere with Migratory Birds

"A great overview of a complex and often emotional challenge. Cat Wars unravels yet another layer of the global decline in biodiversity and frames the potentially drastic consequences of inaction."—Grant Sizemore, American Bird Conservancy

"Cat Wars is a brave, engaging, and careful accounting of the cats we love and the devastation they inflict on birds and other wildlife."—John M. Marzluff, author of Welcome to Subirdia: Sharing Our Neighborhoods with Wrens, Robins, Woodpeckers, and Other Wildlife

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