What If All the Cats in the World Suddenly Died?

rockin'robin

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Perhaps you're a cat lover. Perhaps you abhor the lazy critters. Either way, when you see a cat lounging on an armchair, napping all day but for the occasional stretch or window gaze, "useless" is by no means the last word that comes to mind. Cats, beloved or otherwise, don't radiate the message that they're indispensable, hard-working members of the household, or the world.

But, in fact, they're just playing it cool (as usual). Experts say that if all the world's cats suddenly died, things would quickly go to hell in a handbasket.

Cats, both pets and strays, may fool us into thinking that they depend on our food and trash for survival, but according to Alan Beck, professor of veterinary medicine and director of the Center for the Human-Animal Bond at Purdue University, they're expert predators with adaptablehunting behaviors. "They are a significant predator of small animals, and can survive as almost solitary animals when the prey is scarce, while thriving in high density when the prey is abundant," Beck told Life's Little Mysteries, a sister site to LiveScience.

And that's just why we'd miss them. By killing mice and rats in barns and grain storage areas, cats are vital for keeping those pests in check. In India, Beck said, cats are believed to play a significant role in lessening the amount of grain loss caused by consumption or contamination by rodents. In other words, it may be true that humans feed cats, but without cats, humans would have less food in the first place. [Why Do Cats Bury Their Poop?]

So, how dramatically would the rodent population increase if cats suddenly vanished? It just so happens that several scientific studies have been conducted that paint a vivid picture. A 1997 study in Great Britain found that the average house cat brought home more than 11 dead animals (including mice, birds, frogs and more) in the course of six months. That meant the 9 million cats of Britain were collectively killing close to 200 million wild specimens per year — not including all those they did not offer up to their owners. A study in New Zealand in 1979 found that, when cats were nearly eradicated from a small island, the local rat population quickly quadrupled.

And if the rodent population shot up, this would of course trigger a cascade of other ecological effects. On that same island in New Zealand, for instance, ecologists observed that, as rat numbers increased in the absence of cats, the population of seabirds whose eggs rats preyed upon declined. If the approximately 220 million domestic cats in the world all bit the dust, seabird populations would likely fall worldwide, while the populations of non-cat predators that prey on rats would be expected to increase.

"All species have an impact," Beck said.

And let's not forget the emotional toll that a mass cat death would take on us humans: "In this country, cats are much loved by many. While there are more dog-owning households (38 percent) than cat- owning households (34 percent), there are actually more domestic cats than dogs because cat owners own more of them. Cats as pets have always been appreciated for the contact, relatively low maintenance, and pedomorphic (child-like) face and general morphology."

What If All the Cats in the World Suddenly Died? - Yahoo! News
 
Cats are the problem to the world.

• allergy
•*too damn cute
•*electric enough to take over the world
 
My last cat could have provided for our family. He often brought me full sized rabbits. :)
 
My last cat could have provided for our family. He often brought me full sized rabbits. :)

Mine left me presents on the steps also. Rabbits, squirrels, birds, moles, rats.

Oh the joy of having a cat. I had one catch a rat in my home. I tried to get her to release it so she would not get blood all over the floor. She just growled at me and refuse to let it go. I had to throw the cat out with the rat still locked in her jaw. :shock: Needless to say. I never had anymore trouble with rats with her around.
 
rats and critters control?

yorkshire terrier is bred for that. or snakes. or ferrets. large lizards.
 
my cats are indoor but nice to have them when any small creatures comes in and they would go after it. From what I remember, it was only one time. :hmm: that was a baby squirrels. i dont know about other small creatures. *knock on wood again*
 
Ferral cats do pose a danger to wildlife. I read some articles on that in the past.
 
Yes they do. I hate my neighbor's cats with a passion. I have found too many headless cardinals in my yard. Neighbors think it is their cats' right to roam around, no matter how many birds they kill and how much they poop in our garden. But I am sure they would not like it one bit if I let my dogs do the same to THEIR yard.
 
If we have no cats at all, then we will have make some clone cats from the labs. Or, we could use the quick poison traps with painless for some rodents, but not all of them because we have hunting birds such as hawks, owls, etc. However, we must not purchase Monstano Company products due its monopoly. Probably, Monstano may not be printed on the package, but do your homework before you buy them.
 
Most cats die at a young age due to abandonment, irresponsible owners and feral cats.
 
Most cats die at a young age due to abandonment, irresponsible owners and feral cats.

True enough. My neighbors have lost at least one cat to a fox or coyote that lives in the ravines around our subdivision. They found the cat's mangled body near the woods.

But they still think it's a good idea to give their remaining cats the "freedom" to roam.

Bloody idiots.

(Other than their cat - ittude, I love these folks dearly - but I think they are idiots about this one issue.)
 
True enough. My neighbors have lost at least one cat to a fox or coyote that lives in the ravines around our subdivision. They found the cat's mangled body near the woods.

But they still think it's a good idea to give their remaining cats the "freedom" to roam.

Bloody idiots.

(Other than their cat - ittude, I love these folks dearly - but I think they are idiots about this one issue.)

It's pretty normal for cats to roam freely here. I'm used to it. I prefer my cats to be kept as indoor cats due to the health risks if they roam freely.
 
Both books do not exist with that title. Although I was close, it's "101 uses for a dead cat." Oh well.
 
I wish one of the uses for a dead cat were to point out to the cat's owner, "Look, bozo, this is what happens to your dearly beloved pet when you let it roam around all night!!"

Sadly, even a dead cat doesn't seem to get the point across.

I would be heart-broken with grief if one of my dogs were killed by another animal, a car, a trap, bitten by a snake, eating something poisonous, any of the various misfortunes that can happen to an animal loose in the wild. But cat-owners seem to shrug it off, as "oh, well, that's how nature works."

I don't get it, I really don't.
 
Have you read the book, "1001 Ways to Use a Dead Baby"?

dead-baby.jpg
 
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