首页|Prey selection and predation behavior of free-roaming domestic cats (Felis catus) in an urban ecosystem: Implications for urban cat management

Prey selection and predation behavior of free-roaming domestic cats (Felis catus) in an urban ecosystem: Implications for urban cat management

扫码查看
? 2022 Elsevier LtdThe ecological impact of free-roaming domestic cats (Felis catus) is well-studied. However, despite receiving considerable attention in both the scientific and popular literature, predation behavior is rarely an explicit consideration when developing cat population management plans. We used motion-activated wildlife cameras to document predation events by cats in Washington, D.C. (U.S.A), and assessed the relationships between predation and local environmental characteristics. Our analyses reveal that predation by cats is greatest where supplemental food is most abundant, and that the probability of a cat preying upon a native species increases closer to forest edges. Conversely, we found that the probability of a cat depredating a non-native brown rat increases with increasing distance from forest edges. Therefore, we recommend the implementation of cat exclusionary buffer zones around urban forests and that free-roaming domestic cat management policies explicitly consider the spatial location of cat-feeding sites. Our findings provide a data-driven approach to free-roaming cat management.

ConservationDomestic catEcological bufferFeral catOutdoor cat managementScience-based policy

Herrera D.J.、Decker S.、Moore S.M.、Gallo T.、Cove M.V.、McShea W.J.、Flockhart D.T.

展开 >

Humane Rescue Alliance

Department of Environmental Science and Policy College of Science George Mason University

North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences

Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute

Appalachian Laboratory University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science

展开 >

2022

Biological Conservation

Biological Conservation

SCI
ISSN:0006-3207
年,卷(期):2022.268
  • 7
  • 90