this post was submitted on 21 Oct 2024
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@[email protected] the rabbits are still a problem. And cats. Bringing back dingos would help. As the globe warms the crocodiles move further south. π±
@[email protected]
Cats?
@[email protected]
Cats kill billions of native animals annually, and are responsible for the extinction of at least 22 native species in Australia.
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/australias-cats-kill-two-billion-animals-annually-180977235/
@[email protected]
@[email protected] @[email protected]
Wow, I didn't know about that. Cats are a problem in the USA as well but apparently not as big of a problem.
@stib @Swede1952 @FerdiMagellan
Most of the cats doing that are feral cats. They are highly adaptable and are common even in remote, arid areas. This is not to say that domestic cats arenβt a problem, & Iβm all for sterilisation & keeping them indoors. But domestic cats are only a small part of the problem.
@Susan60 @stib @FerdiMagellan
Yes, sterilization would help with domestic cats. I don't suppose feral cats help keep rabbit populations in check.
@[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected]
They probably do, but they also wipe out populations of small marsupials like bilbies. Most Australians arenβt familiar with these animals. Theyβre often nocturnal & very shy. We know about & love our kangaroos, koalas etc (even as we allow habitat destruction to result in koalas becoming endangered), but we give little thought to the smaller nocturnal marsupials.