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The volunteers climb out of their station wagon, cat food in hand, and the feline faces appear in the undergrowth around the ...
Outdoor cats do not live as long as indoor cats. Outdoor cats are at risk of trauma from cars, or from fights with other cats, raccoons and free-roaming dogs. Coyotes are known to eat cats.
Cold temperatures and prolonged exposure to snow increase a cat's risk for frostbite and hypothermia. PSPCA animal advocate Carol Erickson shares how you can help keep outdoor cats safe in the winter.
Free-ranging cats hunt or scavenge more than 2,000 species, some of them imperiled, according to a new study. By Catrin Einhorn Everyone can agree on one thing: It’s not the cats’ fault they ...
The owner told Newsweek the porch cat is "child-free by choice." TikTok @sagewindfarmstead. She wrote on the video: "Trying to pawn the naughty orphaned barn kitten off on Wednesday, my ...
Outdoor cats have a particularly devastating impact on birds, ranking as "the top source of direct, human-caused bird mortality in the United States, killing an estimated 2.4 billion birds every ...
It was a brisk October afternoon when Marissa Eller decided to sit on her front porch for a few minutes. She expected to have some quiet time, assuming she was alone, but someone secretly lurked ...
The oldest cat to ever live was Creme Puff, a Texas cat who lived to be 38 years old and 3 days. Creme Puff was born in August 1967 and died in August 2005, according to Guinness World Records.
It’s also worth mentioning that outdoor cats also impact wildlife. The American Bird Conservancy notes that domestic cats have contributed to the extinction of 63 bird, mammal, and reptile species.