Culture Cats classified as 'invasive alien species' by Polish institute - Polish Academy of Sciences cites damage domestic cats cause to birds, other wildlife

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A cat at the 'Miau Café' in Warsaw, Poland, snacks on a cake in this 2018 file photo. A Polish scientific institute has classified domestic casts as an 'invasive alien species' due to the damage they inflict on birds and other wildlife, drawing backlash from some cat lovers. (Czarek Sokolowski/The Associated Press)

A Polish scientific institute has classified domestic cats as an "invasive alien species," citing the damage they cause to birds and other wildlife.

Some cat lovers have reacted emotionally to this month's decision and put the key scientist behind it on the defensive.

Wojciech Solarz, a biologist at the state-run Polish Academy of Sciences, wasn't prepared for the disapproving public response when he entered Felis catus, the scientific name for the common house cat, into a national database run by the academy's Institute of Nature Conservation.

The database already had 1,786 other species listed with no objections, Solarz told The Associated Press. Invasive alien species No. 1,787, however, is a creature so beloved that it often is honoured in Poland's pet cemeteries, often reserved for cats and dogs.

Solarz described the growing scientific consensus that domestic cats can have a harmful impact on biodiversity, given the number of birds and mammals they hunt and kill.

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Domestic cats have been cited as having a harmful impact on biodiversity, given the number of birds and mammals they hunt and kill. (Vadim Ghirda/The Associated Press)

The criteria for including the cat among alien invasive species, "are 100 per cent met by the cat," he said.

In a television segment aired by independent Polish broadcaster TVN24, the biologist faced off last week against a veterinarian who challenged Solarz's conclusion on the dangers cats pose to wildlife.

Dorota Suminska, the author of a book titled The Happy Cat, pointed to other causes of shrinking biodiversity, including a polluted environment and urban building facades that can kill birds in flight.

"Ask if man is on the list of non-invasive alien species," Suminska said, arguing that cats were unfairly assigned too much blame.

Solarz said that some media reports about the listing created a false impression that the institute was calling for feral and other cats to be euthanized. Earlier this month, his institute published a post on its website citing the "controversy" and seeking to clarify its position. The institute stressed that it was "opposed to any cruelty toward animals."

It also argued that its classification was in line with European Union guidelines.

As far as categorizing cats as "alien," the institute noted that Felis catus was domesticated probably around 10,000 years ago in the cradle of the great civilizations of the ancient Middle East, making the species alien to Europe from a strictly scientific point of view.

The institute also stressed that all it was recommending was for cat owners to limit the time their pets spend outdoors during bird breeding season.

"I have a dog, but I don't have anything against cats," Solarz said.

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This article is as disgusting and loathsome as some of the transgender nonsense people post here so that we "know the enemy."

Cats are essential to civilization. Ancient civilizations could not have flourished without them, because grain silos would have been infested with vermin but for cats. Medieval superstition about cats, which reduced their populations for fear they were witches, helped catalyze the Black Plague. Woe to any person or nation that does not bow down to and pay respect to our friends the cats, in all their majestic splendor.
 
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It's pretty common knowledge that indoor/outdoor cats just kill because. If they have a human source of food, the vast majority of non-feral cats will never eat their kills. Part of the reason I have cats is that in addition to keeping a clean household, they offer an additional layer of rodent deterrence, plus sometimes they will actually eat insects for shits and giggles. Chickens can also occasionally share the same purpose. They absolutely will hunt down and eat mice or anything else they think they can swallow. If they could get a bird they would and they are known cannibals.

What is sometimes forgotten is what is good for the goose is good for the gander. Cats are predator/prey animals and coyotes, hawks, owls, etc all love themselves a cat snack.
 
9 Months ago a couple from Austin moved in with their 4 outdoor cats. They are liberal but nice enough people, and fellow birders. One of their cats back in March got eaten by a coyote(PL; we live near wilderness/ranch land) and they STILL are letting their three remaining cats wander around like nothing happened. Even worse is they keep their back garage open 24/7, doesn’t take much for a rattlesnake or a skunk to move in for an unwelcome surprise.
They’ve tried to pull the whole “cats don’t belong indoors” thing even after their beloved cat became lunch. ☠️
Only one of their cats is friendly to people and will actually go out of their way to greet you and ask for pets. The others are stuck up typical cats so I don’t care if they get gobbled up by an Owl/Bobcat/Coyote.
 
The only issue with declaring invasive species is that it is extremely fucking difficult to eliminate, cull, or relocate all of said species out of the ecosystem in which they are now finding success. This is especially true considering that cats are one of the most common pets, and because nobody has a zero percent error margin those pet cats may escape their confines even if the majority of cat owners do their best to keep them indoors. TNR programs work to reduce the population of stray cats overtime, at least. They are far more effective than trying to round up all outdoor cats and killing them en masse. Same for feral pigs and grey squirrels. Killing them doesn't really work.

What must also be considered is how long, exactly has the "invasive" species been around in the ecosystem for? Cats were brought into European countries since at least the Roman empire, so that's hundreds of years. You would think other species have adapted to these new predators by now - or shocker - it's humans enroaching upon wildlife in the many ways we have done that's reducing biodiversity. Cats don't cut down forests, pollute the water, lay out traps and hunt down all other species no matter how big or small. We are blaming the wrong animal here.
 
invasive alien species

Poles better look in the mirror first.
One extra-strength Tylenol will kill a cat.

Be sure to mix it into the food because the powder is bitter.
I get that edgelord posting is the norm in this subforum but if you have MacDonald Triad traits you're probably better off hiding your powerlevel.
 
This would be based if it happened in North America or most of the Pacific Rim (where there were literally no native small ambush predators and the birds and rodents evolved without the assumption that they would be ganked from stealth) but it doesn't make sense in Europe (where small cat species naturally exist).
It does make sense in Europe because the same issues still exist, they're just not as plainly catastrophic as they are in the Pacific. Instead, it's a festering wound that's barely been addressed in large part because people get so defensive about it, or think it's somehow natural.

Wildcats and lynxses tend to kill small to medium sized mammals rather than birds. They actually have an ecological niche to fill and they do it proportionally. For example, the global population of wildcats (including Africa) is 20.000 individuals. There are 12 million domestic cats in the UK alone. You don't have to be David Attenborough to realize that releasing literal millions of what amount to wide-ranging apex predators into increasingly expanding but still relatively concentrated areas is going to wreak havoc on a lot of wild populations.
 
The only issue with declaring invasive species is that it is extremely fucking difficult to eliminate, cull, or relocate all of said species out of the ecosystem in which they are now finding success. This is especially true considering that cats are one of the most common pets, and because nobody has a zero percent error margin those pet cats may escape their confines even if the majority of cat owners do their best to keep them indoors. TNR programs work to reduce the population of stray cats overtime, at least. They are far more effective than trying to round up all outdoor cats and killing them en masse. Same for feral pigs and grey squirrels. Killing them doesn't really work.

What must also be considered is how long, exactly has the "invasive" species been around in the ecosystem for? Cats were brought into European countries since at least the Roman empire, so that's hundreds of years. You would think other species have adapted to these new predators by now - or shocker - it's humans enroaching upon wildlife in the many ways we have done that's reducing biodiversity. Cats don't cut down forests, pollute the water, lay out traps and hunt down all other species no matter how big or small. We are blaming the wrong animal here.

So how are the Dodos extinct if killing animals doesn't work.

Though there is the case of the Aussies going overboard on killing rabbits and cats but it can be effective if they find a way.

 
This article is as disgusting and loathsome as some of the transgender nonsense people post here so that we "know the enemy."

Cats are essential to civilization. Ancient civilizations could not have flourished without them, because grain silos would have been infested with vermin but for cats. Medieval superstition about cats, which reduced their populations for fear they were witches, helped catalyze the Black Plague. Woe to any person or nation that does not bow down to and pay respect to our friends the cats, in all their majestic splendor.
Ancient humans were correct to worship cats as gods.
 
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