We Do Practically Nothing To Control Wild Cats Threatening Rare Seals And Birds
While Hawaii’s animal rights and environmental groups are sharply divided on solutions, there’s little government support even for steps the two sides agree on.
Animal welfare groups and conservation scientists found a “common enemy” last week in their decades-old fight over free-roaming cats in Hawaii: political inaction.
But fundamental disagreements remain over聽the approach that should be taken and tools that could be used to remove thousands of feral, stray and abandoned cats from forests, beaches and urban areas.
State and federal scientists underscored the urgency in protecting聽endangered seabirds and seals from the direct and indirect threat the cats pose.
Animal welfare organizations have stood in the way of culling the cat colonies. But it’s also proven challenging to get more聽government support for programs that both sides agree on, such as sterilization and responsible pet-ownership education.
It was standing room only at the first of two sessions on this long-standing issue last week聽at the 聽in Honolulu.
A few hundred people聽packed a聽room at the Hawaii Convention Center to hear what experts had to say about the effort to manage the threat that feral cats pose to endangered seabirds, including the and , as well as Hawaiian spinner dolphins and critically endangered .
Andr茅 Raine and Kyle Pias have been working with the and Hono O Na Pali Seabird Mitigation Project to set up cameras and traps in remote areas to capture cats that are hunting rare seabirds that nest on the ground.
In a five-year period on Kauai, 268 kills were logged, including eggs, chicks and adult birds. Cats killed just over a third of these animals and rats killed about half.聽The cats are of particular concern because they are hunting breeding pairs of petrels and shearwaters, whereas the rats mostly eat the eggs.
At just one site, Raine said cats were recorded visiting bird burrows 90 times. In some cases, the cats were raising their kittens in burrows where they had killed the birds and then teaching their offspring how to hunt.
Raine and Pias聽are perfecting their traps, testing the use of baited versus unbaited traps depending on the situation. But with so many cats and so few resources, it鈥檚 an enormous challenge.
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鈥淪ome of the remote places on the island are littered with cats,” Pias said, adding that necropsies have shown the cats’ stomachs are filled with feathers.
Meanwhile, other scientists are in a different fight over the spread of an incurable parasitic disease that鈥檚 killing marine mammals.
Toxoplasmosis, which is only spread through cat feces, has killed eight monk seals and two spinner dolphins, said Michelle Barbierri of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration鈥檚 .
With estimates of 300,000 feral cats on Oahu alone and only 300 monk seals in the main Hawaiian Islands, Barbierri said it鈥檚 critical that a sensible, humane and effective plan be implemented.
Toxoplasmosis is also killing introduced聽birds, including francolin on Kauai, and native species such as the red-footed booby on Oahu and nene on Maui. But mortality is not as high.
Despite being such a 鈥渢horny issue,鈥 Barbieri is optimistic that the animal welfare groups and conservationists can come together to solve the problem.
Peter Adler, a professional mediator, facilitated a two-hour panel discussion among the two sides. 聽
A major sticking point is the perceived value of the animals.
鈥淪ome cats are absolutely loved and adored and some cats are vilified,鈥 said Mary Steiner of the , which opposes euthanasia.聽鈥淲e believe that all animals have intrinsic value and we don鈥檛 separate one from the other.鈥
That鈥檚 not how conservationists view the issue. They see the animals more in terms of populations, not individuals.
Afsheen Siddiqi of the state said Hawaii is home to 28 percent of the endangered species in the United States and Hawaii is where 78 percent of species have gone extinct.
鈥淲e鈥檙e talking about a very fragile community,鈥 she said.
There are legal requirements to protect endangered species, which has prompted some jurisdictions to view the problem as a financial liability, said Chris Lepczyk, who鈥檚 been working at the University of Hawaii on understanding human wildlife conflict and trying to find solutions.
He said there is broad public support to reduce the number of free-roaming outdoor cats. But there is disagreement over whether euthanasia should be part of that effort and if trap-neuter-release programs are actually effective.
鈥淵ou鈥檙e wasting resources if you鈥檙e not getting to the point where you鈥檙e actually reducing populations,鈥 said Kate Atema of the .
Nearly 70 percent of Oahu voters want feral cats removed from Hawaii, according to a聽Civil Beat poll in October.聽Just 13 percent wanted to leave the cats alone, 9 percent had no opinion either way and 9 percent were unsure.
Steiner said accessible, low-fee, spay and neuter services could help. The Humane Cociety has sterilized 54,000 cats since 1994, which scientists have said is laudable but barely puts a dent in the enormous population of feral cats.
Grant Sizemore of the said feral cats have been a documented problem in Hawaii for more than 100 years.
鈥淭alk is cheap,鈥 he said.
Atema said some steps need to be taken, no matter how small, to instill faith in the ability to address this issue.
鈥淭he common enemy, if we need one, is there鈥檚 been a lack of action,鈥 she said.
Even with a workable solution in hand, elected and appointed officials need to carry it out.
鈥淭here鈥檚 a political will issue,鈥 Lepczyk said, adding that people in power don鈥檛 like change. 鈥淲e need people to take the issue forward.鈥
Sizemore encouraged people to vote and to testify on measures when they go before the county councils or the Legislature.
鈥淲e need you to speak up and let them know that having feral cats running around the beach parks or up in the mountains predating Newell鈥檚 shearwaters or Hawaiian petrels is unacceptable,鈥 he said.
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About the Author
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Nathan Eagle is a deputy editor for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at neagle@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at , Facebook and Instagram .