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Photo by
Linda D. Kozaryn

Photo by
Linda D. Kozaryn

Photo by
Linda Kozaryn

Photo by
Edith M. Alcorn, U.S.N

Lost,
abandoned and feral cats are a concern at many military installations worldwide. The
Armed Forces Pest Management Board intends to publish updated guidelines this fall
on how to humanely treat on-base feline populations.
Photo courtesy
of Alley Cat Allies

Photo by
Edith M. Alcorn, U.S.N

Photo by
Linda D. Kozaryn

Photo by Edith
M. Alcorn, U.S.N

Photo by
Linda D. Kozaryn
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By
Linda D. Kozaryn
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON -- Too many stray cats on
base. What's a commander to do? Shoot them? Poison them? Bag them and dump them downtown?
Hold on. Don't be too hasty. There are
other options.
The Armed Forces Pest Management Board
advocates treating stray and feral cats humanely, according to Peter J. Egan, environmental
biologist with the board at Walter Reed Army Medical Center here. That means no poison
-- ever -- no leg traps and no shooting, except in dire situations.
Most military installations have stray
and feral cat populations, he said. Strays are lost or abandoned pets. Feral cats
are those born in the wild and never domesticated.
"Usually, we have feral cat problems
when they're around a playground or other public area where a lot of people come into
contact," Egan said. Or, in some cases, cats prey on protected wildlife on base.
Cats living at remote industrial sites
on an installation aren't necessarily recognized as a problem, he said. "You don't
even know they're there until you come out late at night with a couple of cans of
cat food. All of a sudden they come out of the woodwork."
The cats ultimately become the base commander's
responsibility, Egan said. "Failure to prevent or control a feral cat population amounts
to inhumane treatment of animals," according to the management board's 1996 guidelines
on dealing with the problem.
DoD has no formal policy on how to deal
with stray and feral cats, only guidelines, Egan said. "We offer options, depending
upon the situation."
Base veterinarians and installation commanders
have policies on pets, he said. That's within their purview. Pests, on the other hand,
are dealt with through the Armed Forces Pest Management Board.
Technical Information Memorandum No.
37, produced by the board, provides a number of ways to deal with stray and feral
cats. It also points out issues base officials need to consider in deciding a course
of action.
The board is revising its guidelines
to include a Web site, ways to promote responsible pet ownership and ways to contact
local animal welfare organizations willing to help with feral cats. Egan said he hopes
to see the new guidelines published this fall.
"Our approach has always been to use
the best practices possible to control them," Egan said. "The guidance we try to give
people is that it's got to be legal and it's got to be humane."
A network of animal welfare organizations
has set up a toll-free number, 888-738-7911, and a Web site, www.1888PETS911.org
to reunite owners with lost pets and help people find homes for animals
or locate local animal welfare organizations.
People sometimes suggest poisoning, drowning
or gassing cats, Egan said. First, there's no EPA-registered poison for cat control.
Beyond that, however, all three are considered inhumane practices -- and that makes
them illegal.
"Others suggest shooting the cats," he
continued. "That's not a very good solution because people don't like to see anyone
shooting cats. Oftentimes the cats are in and around housing areas, so shooting them
would not be very safe.
The guidelines say shooting may be an
option when other means are not available or have been ineffective, or in emergencies
such as a rabies outbreak when human health is at great risk. "Strict command approval
must be obtained in advance, and proper public affairs coordination must be effected,"
the guidelines state.
Nobody loves a cockroach -- except maybe
an entomologist -- and no one feels bad when we kill one, Egan said. But killing cats
-- even feral ones -- is another matter entirely. Destroying cats oftentimes becomes
a public relations nightmare. The Armed Forces Pest Management Board highly recommends
that local pest control officials coordinate cat control plans with the base commander
and public affairs officials.
The base should have a good reason if
they intend to destroy feral cats, Egan stressed.
"In some parts of the country, we have
problems with rabies, other parts we have problems with plague. Those would probably
be the two biggest reasons we would deal with cats as a true problem," he said. "In
some areas, we find cats are preying on endangered species. By law, DoD is required
to protect endangered and threatened species. That would be another reason to get
them out. Otherwise, they're just a nuisance, too many cats in one place."
Recently, Egan said, the board received
complaints from people "who felt it hurt their sensibilities" to call a cat a pest.
"I can appreciate their position. Most dogs and cats are viewed as pets. But it's
also true that when you have a lawn, a rosebush growing where you don't want it is
sometimes called a 'weed' because it's in your way."
A wild cat preying on endangered species
or that has fleas or may be carrying rabies no longer falls in the pet category, he
said. "We're not saying that all cats are pests. We're saying that under certain circumstances
anything we like can be a pest."
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