Monthly Archives: September 2012

KILLER KITTIES

Cat predation on birds and small mammals is probably worse than you thought. 

Last month, The Wildlife Society and the American Bird Conservancy suggested that nearly a third of all free-roaming house cats are capturing and killing wildlife, resulting in an estimated loss of 4 billion animals per year, including at least 500 million birds. This number far exceeds previous estimates.

This information was derived from a study conducted by researchers at the University of Georgia in partnership with the National Geographic Society’s Crittercam program. Local cat owners near Athens, Georgia, volunteered 60 of their outdoor house cats for the experiment in exchange for free health screenings for their pets. The cameras recorded the cats’ outdoor activities during all four seasons of the year, averaging five to six hours of outside time every day.

“The results were certainly surprising, if not startling,” said Kerrie Anne Loyd of the University of Georgia, who was the lead author of the study. The researchers found that about 30 percent of the sampled cats were successful in capturing and killing prey. Those cats averaged about one kill for every 17 hours spent outdoors, or 2.1 kills per week. What was also surprising was that less than a quarter of the cats brought their kills back home. The range of prey species was broad, too, including birds, lizards, voles, chipmunks, frogs, and small snakes.

The finding that cats would bring back under a quarter of their kills to the residence of their owners actually counters previous studies that have attempted to measure the impacts of domestic cats on wildlife. Earlier estimates of a billion birds and animals per year were based on dead animals that the cats would bring home. The KittyCams showed that almost half of the time cats would leave the prey at the capture site and slightly over a quarter were eaten and never brought home.

This University of Georgia study does not take into consideration the impacts of the estimated 60 million feral cats that roam the United States. This fact alone, suggests that the killing fields out there are huge!

Finally, the University of Georgia researchers also found that the house cats were engaging in risky activity outdoors such as crossing busy roads, entering tiny crawlspaces, and interacting with potentially diseased stranger cats.

A brochure for cat owners, designed to address both risky feline behavior and the high rate of wildlife predation, was developed by researchers and can be viewed here:
www.kittycams.uga.edu/other/kittycamsbrochure.pdf

For more details from the American Bird Conservancy and The Wildlife Society, see here:
www.abcbirds.org/newsandreports/releases/120806.html

Celebrate Clean Water, Send in Your Fish Tale

It’s time to celebrate clean water thanks to the 40th Anniversary of the Clean Water Act. We wanted to let you know that NWF has just launched a photo event called “Share Your Fish Tales” that we plan to continue through mid-October.  We would love to have you and your organizations participate.  Through the “Fish Tale” event our goal is to reach as many anglers and fishing families as possible and have them communicate through their fish pics and tales why clean water and fishing matter to them.

            Here’s what is happening: Land Tawney has just kicked off the event with a personal blogon NWF’s website. He has shown his own Montana fish pics and told his fish tale and encouraged folks to do the same, by providing a link to post fish photos and short fish tales (200 words or less) on a dedicated Flickr site. As Land says, we not only want photos of you “gripping and grinning” with big fish, but photos of the waters they came from, and pictures of your child’s first fish and fishing experience. 

            We welcome your photos and stories as well as your assistance in getting the word out. Throughout September and early October, we plan to post guest blogs and otherwise share many of these pictures and stories, highlighting the importance of clean water to good fishing. We also want to share these messages with federal, state, and local decision makers.  We welcome your groups promoting this message and this event through your own websites and blogs.

            As every angler knows, clean water and good fishing go hand in hand. To honor the passage of the Clean Water Act and to help renew clean water protections for our streams, lakes, wetlands, and bays, please help us raise the chorus of sportsmen voices in support of the Clean Water Act.

            If you have questions or ideas for joining the celebration, please feel free to contact Land Tawney or Jan Goldman-Carter.

            Here are some sample tweets to distribute to your networks:

Celebrate #CleanWater and share your fish tales and photos with us bit.ly/NKtFKLbit.ly/NcCFXK

NWF is celebrating the 40th Anniversary of the #CleanWaterAct. Tell us why you love #CleanWater bit.ly/NKtFKL bit.ly/NcCFXK

NWF is hosting a photo event to celebrate #CleanWater. Share your fish tales and photos with us bit.ly/NKtFKL bit.ly/NcCFXK

KC Catfish Midwest Open Championship at Atchison, KS Sept. 16

KC Catfish presents the Midwest Open Championship (open to all) on Sunday, September 16 at Independence Park in AtchisonKS. $2000, first place-guaranteed! Registration opens at 4:30 am, launch is at 7 am and the weigh in is at 4 pm. You can pre-register for the reduced rate of $125, but pre-entries must be postmarked by Monday,September 10. Entry fee the day of the tournament will be $145.

Since this is a Sunday daylight tournament, come on out and do some pre-fishing on Saturday! Atchison‘s a cool little town, there’s plenty to do. Mention that you’re fishing our tournament and receive discounted rates at the Super 8 (913- 367-7666) or AmericInn (913-367-4000).

Dove Banding Program Provides Valuable Information

Hunters urged to watch for bands on harvested doves

September 1 marks the start of the 2012 hunting seasons with dove season opening day. Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism (KDWPT) officials remind dove hunters to check harvested doves for leg bands. For the last 10 years, biologists in Kansas, as well as those in most other states, have banded mourning doves each summer in an effort to gain information about population size, harvest, and migration patterns.

Dove bands, small aluminum rings with unique nine-digit codes attached around the lower leg, are smaller versions of the leg bands used on ducks and geese that hunters may be more familiar with. KDWPT staff and volunteers banded more than 3,000 doves in 2012, and more than 20,000 in the last 10 years all across the state. The majority of banded doves recovered in Kansas were banded in Kansas, with birds banded in MissouriIowa andNebraska also commonly harvested. Birds banded in Kansas are also frequently recovered in TexasMissouri, and Oklahoma, and as far away as southern Mexico.

Banded doves should be reported using the toll free phone number (800-327-BAND) or website printed on the band (www.reportband.gov). Banding data is an important component of bird research that benefits both bird populations as well as hunters. By reporting bands, hunters are helping KDWPT better manage dove populations. For more information on doves, dove hunting, and dove banding, visit the “Dove Banding Study page on KDWPT’s website (ks.outdoors.com), the U.S. Geological Survey’s Bird Banding Laboratory webpage (www.reportband.gov) or flyways.us.

Correction: Kinsley Kids Klassic Sept. 15

Posted: 30 Aug 2012 06:33 AM PDT
Aug. 31, 2012
PRATT — An Aug. 30, 2012, news release from the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism (KDWPT) announced in its opening paragraph that the annual Kinsley Kids Klassic trap shooting tournament for young shooters will be held on Sept. 17. This date is in error. The correct date is Sept. 15. The date did appear correctly in the article’s title.
For details, visit the KDWPT website, ksoutdoors.com. The registration deadline for the event is Sept. 10. To enter, receive an official program, receive more information, or find out where to practice close to home, phone toll free at 1-888-324-5445.