The Implications of Policies on the Welfare of Free-Roaming Cats in New Zealand
Abstract
:Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Review
2.1. Feral Cat Management
2.1.1. Laws and Regulations for Controlling Feral Cats
2.1.2. Attitudes towards Feral Cats
2.1.3. Comparison of Laws and Regulations for Feral Cats
2.2. Stray Cat Management
2.2.1. Laws and Regulations for Controlling Stray Cats
2.2.2. Attitudes towards Controlling Stray Cats
2.2.3. Comparison of Laws and Regulations for Stray Cats
2.3. Regulating the Companion Cat’s Body: Limiting Reproduction
2.3.1. Welfare Benefits of Desexing and Prepubertal Desexing
2.3.2. Laws and Regulations for Desexing
2.3.3. Attitudes towards Desexing
- In November 2021, Mackenzie District Council did not include a proposal for desexing and microchipping in their Keeping of Animals bylaws review. However, desexing and microchipping were recommended as responsible cat ownership behaviours. The final bylaw acknowledges that a lack of legislation for microchipping and registering cats limits their ability to mandate it through a bylaw. The bylaw further indicates that the recommendation to desex and microchip cats will be considered when an application is made for residents to obtain more than the two cats, as permitted under the bylaw. Even though desexing and microchipping are not explicitly required, these behaviours can still be factored into decision making regarding cats [62].
- In September 2020, Selwyn District Council removed mandatory desexing (and microchipping) in their public consultation for their new animal control bylaws, due to the behaviour being too difficult to enforce and the Council having no ability to issue fines or fund enforcement without national legislation [63].
- In 2019, Lower Hutt District Council had originally included mandatory desexing as part of the new proposed animal control bylaws. However, they decided to not seek a requirement for desexing cats. A survey of Lower Hutt residents indicated a ‘promote and educate’ approach was more favoured, and there was a lack of complaints related to cats [64]. Notably, 99% of survey respondents indicated that their cats were desexed, and over 53% of cat owners and 65% of non-cat owners supported mandatory desexing through bylaws [64].
2.3.4. Comparison with Laws and Regulations for Desexing
2.4. Regulating the Companion Cat’s Identity: Microchipping and Registration, Collars
2.4.1. Laws and Regulations for Identification
2.4.2. Attitudes towards Identification
2.4.3. Comparison of Laws and Regulations for Identification
2.5. Regulating the Companion Cat’s Space: How Many and Where
2.5.1. Laws and Regulations Related to the Cat’s Physical Space
2.5.2. Attitudes towards Regulating Cat’s Physical Space
2.5.3. Comparison of Laws and Regulations of a Cat’s Physical Space
3. Discussion
3.1. Challenges with the Current System
3.2. Better Understanding of the Impacts of Laws and Regulations Is Needed
3.3. Better Understanding of the Cat–Human Relationship Is Needed
3.4. A New Zealand National Cat Act
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Topic | Welfare Impact | Requirement | Source | Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
Stray hold, find owner | (+) Reunite companion cats that have become lost; rehome stray cats that are socialised. Provide humane treatment for a stray cat if needed. (−) Stress related to confinement at shelter, risk of exposure to disease at the shelter. | An approved organisation (e.g., SPCA NZ) that takes custody of stray cat must take reasonable steps to find the owner, is allowed to take reasonable steps to prevent or mitigate any suffering, and must hold a stray cat for a minimum period of seven days before selling or rehoming the animal. This stray hold time can be avoided or reduced for a cat considered wild or unsocialised, and severely distressed due to stray hold, or if the cat is diseased and this may impact other animals in custody. | Animal Welfare Act, 1999, Part 7, Section 141 [10] | National |
Prohibition of feeding stray cats. | (+) Reduce the stray cat population through decrease of resources; discourage congregation of cats that may lead to fighting, spread of disease, breeding. (−) Limit on providing for the nutritional needs of cats that may rely on being fed by humans. | Prohibits feeding or providing shelter to pest cats on public or private land without permission of the occupier. Pest cats are defined as those that are not microchipped where it is required, or not microchipped and registered, and are free-living, unowned, and unsocialised and have limited to no relationship with or dependence upon humans. | 2019–2039 Greater Wellington Regional Pest Management Plan [23] | Regional |
Prohibition of moving stray cats | (+) Reduce the stray cat population through decrease in moving them to different locations. Potentially reduce abandonment. Reduce stress related to capture, transport, and relocation. (−) Not clear. | Prohibits moving unowned cats to specific areas in the region to or near islands that are cat-free or are considered sensitive ecological areas. An unowned cat is defined as one without a microchip or other means of identification that is unregistered and is within any site the council declares as having sensitive ecological value and in a rural area. | 2020–2030 Auckland Regional Pest Management Plan [24] | Regional |
Prohibition of feeding stray (and companion) cats | (+) Reduce the stray cat population through decrease of resources; discourage congregation of cats that may lead to fighting, spread of disease, breeding. (−) Limit on providing for the nutritional needs of cats that may rely on being fed by humans. | Prohibit a person from feeding cats within the regions that contain a resident breeding or roosting population of any threatened native bird, reptile, or amphibian. This rule applies to any cat and is not specific to stray cats. | 2020–2030 Auckland Regional Pest Management Plan [24] | Regional |
Stray cats are legally considered a pest | (−) Subject to lethal control such as shooting, trapping, or poisoning. | Stray cats are defined as companion or domestic cats that have been lost or abandoned and may have their needs indirectly supplied by humans and live around human centres. | 2017–2027 Northland Regional Pest Management Plan [25] | Regional |
Reducing abandonment | (+) Reduces the number of companion cats that are abandoned or deserted who are reliant on humans to meet their needs. (+) Reduces the number of companion cats that become stray. | It is an offense to desert an animal without provisioning for the animal’s physical, health, and behavioural needs. | Animal Welfare Act, 1999, Part 1, Section 14 [10] | National |
Reducing abandonment | (+) Reduces the number of companion cats that are abandoned or deserted who are reliant on humans to meet their needs. (+) Reduces the number of companion cats that become stray. | Prohibits the abandonment of any cat within the Auckland region. | 2020–2030 Auckland Regional Pest Management Plan [24] | Regional |
Topic | Welfare Impact | Requirement | Source | Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mandatory desexing | (+) Reduced number of unwanted cats and kittens, reduced nuisance. (−) Increased surrender at shelters and abandonment. | Mandates desexing for all cats over six months of age, born after the 1st of July 2018 (exemptions are in place for registered breeders). | Palmerston North City Council 2018 bylaws [55] | City |
Mandatory desexing | (+) Reduced number of unwanted cats and kittens, reduced nuisance. (−) Increased surrender at shelters and abandonment. | Allows for the council to include terms and conditions requiring desexing of cats if a person seeks approval to keep more than three cats or kittens over the age of six months on their property. | New Plymouth City Council 2020 bylaws [56] | City |
Mandatory desexing; prepubertal desexing | (+) Reduced number of unwanted cats and kittens, reduced nuisance. (−) Increased surrender at shelters and abandonment. | Requires any cat over four months of age be desexed unless for breeding purposes and be nationally registered; or the owner provides a certificate from a veterinarian indicating that desexing will adversely affect the cat’s health and/or welfare (veterinarians, SPCA, and cat boarding premises are exempt from this requirement). | Whanganui District Council 2020 bylaws [57] | Local District |
Mandatory desexing | (+) Benefits from desexing; reduction in unwanted cats and kittens; reduction in predation of native wildlife. (−) Increased surrender at shelters and abandonment. | Requires residents on Stewart Island/ Rakiura to desex any cat that they keep, hold, enclose, or otherwise harbour as an exemption from a prohibition of having cats (except Bengal cats) on the island; this requirement extends to any Southland residents who keep, hold, or otherwise harbour a Bengal cat. | Southland 2019 Regional Pest Management Plan [58] | Regional |
Topic | Welfare Impact | Requirement | Source | Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
Microchip and registration | (+) Ensure owners can keep companion cats. (−) Increase in relinquishment. | Requires all cats over the age of 12 weeks to be microchipped and registered on the New Zealand Companion Animal Register. | 2016 Greater Wellington City Council bylaw [76] | City |
Microchip and registration | (+) Ensure owners can keep companion cats. (−) Increase in relinquishment. | Requires all cats over six months of age and born after 1st of July 2018 to be microchipped and registered on the New Zealand Companion Animal Register. | 2018 Palmerston North City Council bylaw [55] | City |
Microchip and registration | (+) Ensure owners can keep companion cats. (−) Increase in relinquishment. | Requires any cat over four months of age to be microchipped and registered with the New Zealand Companion Animal Register. | 2020 Whanganui District Council bylaw [57] | Local District |
Microchip and registration | (+) Ensure owners can keep companion cats. (−) Increase in relinquishment. | Requires every person who keeps a cat over the age of four months to microchip and register the cat with the New Zealand Companion Animal Register or other approved registry. | 2021 Selwyn District Council bylaw [77] | Local District |
Microchip and registration | (+) Ensure owners can keep companion cats. (−) Increase in relinquishment. | Required if cat owners possess, keep, hold, enclose, or otherwise harbour Bengal cats (no exceptions are made for living on or travelling to Stewart Island/Rakiura and other offshore islands). | 2019 Southland Regional Pest Management Plan [58] | Region |
Microchip and registration | (+) Ensure owners can keep companion cats. (−) Increase in relinquishment. | Required if cat owners keep, hold, enclose, or otherwise harbour in place any cat either in transit to or present on Stewart Island/Rakiura. | 2019 Southland Regional Pest Management Plan [58] | Region |
Collar and registration | (+) Ensure cats are not subject to pest control. (−) Increase in the number of cats lethally managed as pests. | Cats without a collar/harness or microchip that are found outside the Gisborne urban area, or to be of rural ownership, are defined as a feral cat and subject to pest management. | 2016–2026 Gisborne Regional Pest Management Plan [78] | Region |
Microchip and registration | (+) Ensure cats are not subject to pest control. (−) Increase in the number of cats lethally managed as pests. | Will be used to distinguish pest cats from non-pest cats and subject to regulations. | 2019–2039 Greater Wellington Regional Pest Management Plan [23] | Region |
Microchip or other method and registration | (+) Ensure cats are not subject to pest control. (−) Increase in the number of cats lethally managed as pests. | Will be used to distinguish an unowned cat from an owned cat and thus subject to regulations. | 2020–2030 Auckland Regional Pest Management Plan [24] | Region |
Topic | Welfare Impact | Requirement | Source | Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
Limits on number of cats per residence | (+) Ensure owners can provide adequate care for companion cats. (−) Increase in relinquishment or abandonment. | Limits the number of cats over a certain age that can be kept at a residence. Some allow for a permit for keeping more than the stated limit. | See [89] for a detailed table of bylaws | City or District |
Ban on keeping a cat | (−) Increase in relinquishment or abandonment. | No cats shall be introduced or kept on any residential lots due to their potential to be predators of the long-tailed bat. | Environment Court of New Zealand [90] | City Area |
Ban on keeping a cat | (−) Increase in relinquishment or abandonment. | Residents on Stewart Island/Rakiura cannot possess, keep, hold, enclose, or otherwise harbour Bengal cats. | 2019 Southland Regional Pest Management Plan [58] | District |
Prohibit cats from an area | (+) Ensure owners can keep companion cats out of areas where they may be managed as a pest. (−) Cat could be managed as a pest. | Any owner of a cat must ensure that their cat does not enter an intensively managed site, as defined in the plan. | 2020–2030 Auckland Regional Pest Management Plan [24] | Region |
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Sumner, C.L.; Walker, J.K.; Dale, A.R. The Implications of Policies on the Welfare of Free-Roaming Cats in New Zealand. Animals 2022, 12, 237. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani12030237
Sumner CL, Walker JK, Dale AR. The Implications of Policies on the Welfare of Free-Roaming Cats in New Zealand. Animals. 2022; 12(3):237. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani12030237
Chicago/Turabian StyleSumner, Christine L., Jessica K. Walker, and Arnja R. Dale. 2022. "The Implications of Policies on the Welfare of Free-Roaming Cats in New Zealand" Animals 12, no. 3: 237. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani12030237
APA StyleSumner, C. L., Walker, J. K., & Dale, A. R. (2022). The Implications of Policies on the Welfare of Free-Roaming Cats in New Zealand. Animals, 12(3), 237. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani12030237