____________________________________
 From: bjo...@abcbirds.org
To: abcbirds-n...@npogroups.org
Sent: 3/14/2011  10:24:15 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time
Subj: New Study Highlights Dramatic  Impact of Cats on Young Birds in 
Washington, D.C. Suburbs


 

 
 
_www.abcbirds.org_ (http://www.abcbirds.org/)  
Contact: Robert Johns, 202-234-7181 ext.210, _bjohns@abcbirds.org_ 
(mailto:bjo...@abcbirds.org)  
New Study  Highlights Dramatic Impact of Cats on Young Birds  In 
Washington,  D.C. Suburbs 

(Washington, D.C., March 14, 2011) A new study on the  effects of 
urbanization on wildlife that tracked the early lives of gray  catbirds in 
three 
Washington, D.C. suburbs found that outdoor cats were the  number one source of 
known predation on the young birds. The_  study_ 
(http://nationalzoo.si.edu/scbi/migratorybirds/science_article/pdfs/55.pdf)    
(http://nationalzoo.si.edu/scbi/migratorybirds/science_article/pdfs/55.pdf)  by 
Dr. Peter Marra and 
Dr. Thomas Ryder of The Smithsonian Institution and  Ms. Anne L. Balogh of 
Towson University, published in the January 2011  edition of the Journal of 
Ornithology, specifically found that almost  80 percent of the catbird 
mortality in the study was from predation and that  cats were the source of 
almost 
half of the known predation. 
“While this study was not national in scope in any regard,  it certainly 
adds more validation to what we have been saying for years;  that outdoor cats 
are a highly destructive predatory force that is causing  havoc in the 
world of native wildlife. This peer-reviewed study was  co-sponsored by one of 
the most respected scientific organizations in the  country – The Smithsonian 
Institution. I hope we can now stop minimizing and  trivializing the 
impacts that outdoor cats have on the environment, and  start addressing the 
serious problem of cat predation,” said Darin  Schroeder, Vice President for 
Conservation Advocacy for American Bird  Conservancy (ABC), the nation’s 
leading 
bird conservation  organization. 
“Up to 500 million birds or more are killed by outdoor cats  in the United 
States. We need to get serious about halting the damage that  cats are 
causing to birds and other wildlife species,” Schroeder said. 
A key to  the study was very small radio transmitters that were affixed to 
sixty-nine  newly hatched gray catbirds in three Washington, DC suburbs – 
Bethesda,  Spring Park, and Opal Daniels. The transmitters recorded the birds’ 
 locations every other day until they died or left the study area. Of the 
42  birds that died during the study, 33 suffered from predation. Nineteen of 
 the predations were known and of that total, nine were killed by  cats. 
According  to the study, the most significant factor affecting a catbird 
fledgling’s  survival was predation and not parental age, brood size, sex, or 
hatching  date. The study revealed that the vast majority of young catbird 
deaths  occurred in the first week after a bird fledged from the nest. 
Because  fledglings beg loudly for food and are not yet alert to predators, 
they 
are  easy prey for domestic cats.  
ABC has been a leader in seeking solutions to the issue of  cat predation 
on birds and has published a variety of materials on the  subject that 
outline approaches to mitigating the problems associated with  cat predation.  
Those materials can be found at 
_http://www.abcbirds.org/abcprograms/policy/cats/materials.html_ 
(http://www.abcbirds.org/abcprograms/policy/cats/materials.html)  
American Bird  Conservancy (_www.abcbirds.org_ (http://www.abcbirds.org/) ) 
conserves native  birds and their habitats throughout the Americas by 
safeguarding the rarest  species, conserving and restoring habitats, and 
reducing 
threats while  building capacity of the bird conservation movement. ABC is 
a 501(c)(3)  not-for-profit membership  organization



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