Australia has announced a five-year plan to rid the country of feral cats by killing them with a toxic gel in order to keep native species safe.
Feral cats are responsible for the extinction of over two dozen species in Australia and are severely impacting the survival of many others. The West Australia government debuted a plan on Tuesday that involves using a deadly new tool that will cull the invasive cat population.
"These feral cats are incredibly devastating on native animals," West Australia Environment Minister Reece Whitby said at a press briefing announcing the initiative, as reported by local news network ABC Australia. "We need to do something: this is a major increase in our activity. We're trying to give native species a fighting chance against this incredible, voracious predator."
Australia's solution to this problem is the Felixer grooming trap, which will spray the cats with toxic goo. The cats will then lick the gel off themselves—containing 1080 poison, or sodium fluoroacetate—poisoning themselves in the process.
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Felixers will be rolled out as part of the West Australian government's five-year feral cat strategy. This will include leasing 16 of the Felixers from their parent company Thylation using non-government conservation groups and Commonwealth grants, and placing them in areas where there are threatened species living.
The Felixers are solar-powered and use lasers and cameras to tell if a passing animal is a feral cat or not, only spraying them with the poison if they have the shape and gait of a cat. They work best in areas where lots of the cats pass through, like fence lines.
"In thousands and thousands of tests, it's been able to correctly identify a feral cat as opposed to a native animal," Whitby said
The Western Australian Feral Cat Working Group found that the Felixers are useful in areas where baiting and using firearms is inappropriate, but that they were expensive and not suited to use on a large scale.
The five-year feral cat strategy will also include baiting across the state where appropriate, increasing up to 880,000 baits annually, as well as increased funding for communities to help eliminate the cats.
Can I just take them all home?
Dont talk to me or my 5 million feral sons ever again
Federally funded plan to house all homeless cats and get them spayed and neutered and cleaned up from diseases. Not even joking, government pays you to own a cat.
You realize these are not kitties right? They are feral. They would eat you before they would let you pet them.
Love will tame their hearts.
it is possible to tame a feral housecat. It's not a lion
I'm not gonna argue that it can't be done but they are feral, not strays, or alley cats that were abandoned as kittens, they are multiple generations removed from domestication. They have lived in the bush from birth and fear humans.
It can be done but you cant do that with 5 million cats. Especially not in a nation of 9.7 million households (25 million people) where incidentally there are roughly 150-200 thousand kittens surrendered to animal shelters a year. Kill them all and adopt the kittens from the shelter that are mostly put to sleep.
Cats are killers. It's like trying to tame a shark. Even if one of these cats was made to be ok with humans they would be chomping at the bit to get outside and kill native animals that have no concept of being prey.
dogs are also killers. Where do you think domestic housecats come from if not from tamed feral cats.
taming 5 million cats is certainly a big task and it's probably infeasible but it isn't impossible by any means. They probably should be rounded up and put down but in a more humane way than poisoning them
How is making people catch them, bag them, ship them, and fight them to stab them with a needle more humane than they lick poison off themselves have a small fit and die?
Poison can be a miserable death. I don’t trust a tech bros cat-poison-bot to have a poison that doesn’t hurt like hell.
It’s a sad situation all around tbh. I just hope they find something that prevents cat-induced extinctions that’s as humane as possible while still getting the job of saving local species accomplished.
Yes, and
That's how I got my cat. It takes longer to develop a bond but when you do it really sticks.