• ratel@mander.xyz
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    1 day ago

    Who tf gets a pet cat and doesn’t let it outside? If you don’t have space for a cat don’t get one.

    • HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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      1 day ago

      Who tf gets a pet cat and doesn’t let it outside?

      People that love their cats and don’t want them to die young. Outdoor cats live an average of 2-5 years, indoor-only cats live an average of 10-15 years. By allowing cats outside, they’re exposed to pathogens, parasites, and dangers that they wouldn’t otherwise experience. In my area, there are coyotes, bobcats, rattlesnakes, hawks, and owls, all of which will quite happily make a meal of a cat. There are also cars; they don’t tend to be able to stop on a dime.

      • Vandals_handle@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        Worldwide domestic cats kill billions of songbirds annually. Many songbirds are insectivores that prey on mosquitoes and flys helping to keep their numbers in check.

          • Vandals_handle@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            Habitat loss, bioaccumulation of Neonicotinoids and predation by invasive species (domestic cats included) are top three issues for declining numbers of songbirds in the US.

            Edit: added region

            • hessenjunge@discuss.tchncs.de
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              19 hours ago

              Even the studies most friendly to your position put the conglomerate that cats are counted it in 4th place - e.g.:

              1. Habitat Loss & Degradation (40-50%)
              2. Climate Change (20-30%)
              3. Pesticides & Chemical Pollution (10-15%)
              4. Predation by Domestic & Invasive Species (5-10%)
              5. Collisions (5-10%)
              6. Disease & Parasites (1-5%)
              7. Illegal Hunting & Trapping (1-3%)
              8. Light Pollution (<1-2%)

              Let’s be very generous and concede cats could contribute 5% (sorry magpies, crows, etc pp. - you contribte almost nothing)

              I don’t argue this point because I am way to fond of cats. I don’t even agree with the above scale - at least when it comes to (formerly) common birds such as house sparrow (Passer domesticus) and common blackbird (Turdus merula). Their main problems are Usutu virus and loss of insect biomass.

              I am shit-scared about the loss of insect biomass. I am old and observant enough to have recognized the Windshield phenomenon by myself. I concur with the Danish study hinting at a 80% decrease from 1997 until 2017 (I actually think it is higher now). I live in major city with nice parks - the decrease is observable here too.

              If the food supply of songbirds has declined by at least 80% that is your biggest problem right there - and it does not only affect songbirds and not only insectivores.

              Over-emphasizing cats in this situation is a smoke screen/ red herring akin to BP pushing the carbon footprint of the common man.

              • Vandals_handle@lemmy.world
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                19 hours ago

                Major environmental effects of climate change be it sea level rise, ocean acidification, drought, intensifying storms and temperature rise are all changes to abiotic conditions. Changing abiotic conditions leads to changes in biotic conditions. A habitat is defined by the combination of biotic and abiotic conditions. Therefore climate change should be included in habitat loss.

      • ratel@mander.xyz
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        1 day ago

        Sounds like a perfect environment to not own a cat. Don’t get get a cat if you live in an area that can’t accommodate them - they aren’t a universal pet despite the fact people treat them like they are.

        • Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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          1 day ago

          Don’t get get a cat if you live in an area that can’t accommodate them

          What is an area that can accommodate pet cats lol

        • HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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          1 day ago

          Under that criteria, there are a grand total of zero areas that can accommodate them. Same goes for dogs.

          But that’s a stupid criteria, because cats are tamed, and thrive indoors.

          Hope that helps.

    • IceyPea@lemm.ee
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      1 day ago

      People with coyotes for neighbours.

      I’m not gonna shame people for outdoor cats… but you’re being a little obtuse here.

    • Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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      1 day ago

      Letting it roam freely risks it getting hurt and without you being there to help it. It’s not very responsible.

        • Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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          17 hours ago

          And they’ve been dying in some horrific ways during that time. Now there’s also a lot of extra, human caused dangers. A responsible pet owner wouldn’t subject their pet to such dangers.

          • hessenjunge@discuss.tchncs.de
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            16 hours ago

            Please elaborate your claims about past and present dangers for pets, I’m curious about specifics.

            Also how are you mitigating the risk of “such dangers” for pets and children?

            • Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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              15 hours ago

              Well you might have heard of cars, highways and other such human created things that haven’t existed during all that time.

              Here’s one study where they examined the welfare concerns over unrestricted/unsupervised outdoor access (and other concerns). https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7070728/#sec5-animals-10-00258

              Also how are you mitigating the risk of “such dangers” for pets and children?

              I wouldn’t allow a cat or a small child to roam around unrestricted. It just seems due to the inherent threats pretty irresponsible.

              • hessenjunge@discuss.tchncs.de
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                1 hour ago

                The study weighs the pros and cons of outdoor and indoor keeping. It also offers some ideas how to mitigate the cons. It’s an interesting study, you should ask someone to explain it to you.

                The study mentions that risk factors of outdoor keeping vary by location. There is no mention of historic risk and therefore no assessment how these may have evolved.

                • Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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                  1 hour ago

                  If you read the conclusion it does say it would be better to keep your cats indoors because of all the associated risks. You just seem to be in denial about the whole thing and I don’t blame you, it’s a really emotional topic for some reason.

                  I mean study after study gives the obvious conclusion that of course it comes with increased risk and of course you wouldn’t be there to help them, it’s unsupervised and unrestricted roaming, so duh. And of course it negatively affects the surrounding wildlife, you’re introducing lots of cats to places that had a lot less if any cats.

                  But there’s such a strong emotional aspect to it that I just can’t understand that makes people pretend stupid or just refuse to accept the obvious conclusion.

                  The study mentions that risk factors of outdoor keeping vary by location. There is no mention of historic risk and therefore no assessment how these may have evolved.

                  You really need a study to say to you that thousands of years ago cars weren’t as much of a risk?

                  • hessenjunge@discuss.tchncs.de
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                    7 minutes ago

                    If you read the conclusion it does say it would be better to keep your cats indoors because of all the associated risks.

                    Except the conclusion does not state that - regardless of how much you want it to. Please have someone explain that to you.

                    You really need a study to say to you that thousands of years ago cars weren’t as much of a risk?

                    Did you even try to read that study you linked? There are more risks than cars and their severity depends on time and location. Is it to hard a concept that in former times e.g. the risk of predation, disease , and other accidents combined with lack of access to veterinarians pose a higher risk?

                    But there’s such a strong emotional aspect to it that I just can’t understand …

                    Similar to this snippet all of your replies seem to be motivated by emotion only - so much that it impairs your ability to assess your own sources. Just because you want your source to agree with you it doesn’t mean it really does.

                    … to accept the obvious conclusion.

                    Again, there is no obvious conclusion. There are no absolutes here - there are pros and cons related to both. How big they are varies by location (see e.g. #2.2 paragraph of the study you linked). I’d like to add that the character of the cat also plays a very massive role - This is missing in this particular study though. Again, have someone explain it to you. Alternatively you could feed it to an AI (see below).

                    I’d guess most cat owners would prefer their cat|s stay indoors, at least in cities (me being one of them tbh). Some cats don’t accept being locked up though - regardless of the amount of entertainment provided.

                    (AI) E.g. here is what mistral.ai answers to “does this study say you should only keep cats indoors?”

                    The study does not explicitly state that cats should only be kept indoors. Instead, it presents a balanced review of the risks and benefits associated with outdoor access for cats. The study discusses various welfare concerns related to uncontrolled outdoor access, such as increased risks of disease, parasites, injury, and predation, as well as negative impacts on wildlife and human neighbors. However, it also acknowledges the welfare benefits of outdoor access, including the opportunity for cats to engage in natural behaviors like hunting, exploring, and climbing, which can improve their physical and mental well-being.

                    Overall, the study emphasizes the need for further research to better understand the impacts of different housing and enrichment strategies on cat welfare, as well as the attitudes and practices of cat owners regarding outdoor access.

                    Assuming you have noone explaining complicted stuff to you or you being unwilling to listen to advice: Feed the study to an AI with reasoning engine (e.g. deepseek) and ask some questions about it. Make sure to ask whether the study is biased and whether (obvious) factors have been omitted. You can learn somehting there as the analytic capacity of AI with reasoning engine is vastly superiout to yours.