• @Underwaterbob@lemm.ee
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      191 year ago

      They’re built to kill. Crazy good reflexes and eyesight, amazing jump height, claws that grab hold of tree branches, feathers, and skin very nicely. There are a bunch of strays where I live, and they are murdering machines when they don’t have a bowl of food plopped in front of them twice a day at their leisure.

    • @InputZero@lemmy.ml
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      131 year ago

      The only reason why cats aren’t hunting us down right now is because we’re too big to be prey. I read somewhere a long time ago that domestic cats have one of the highest predation success rate in the mammalian class. Meaning once they choose to actually try to hunt something they usually get it.

    • I’ve watched neighbours cats take out song birds in our garden several times. They’re usually too well fed to actually eat them so just “play” the bird gets injured/has a heart attack and dies from that. Something like 1 in 10 homes has a cat on average in the UK. The better fed/kept they are the better they hunt.

    • @chiliedogg@lemmy.world
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      51 year ago

      There was a mockingbird that would always attack our cats. The grandma cat had a beak-shaped cut in her ear and a bald spot on her head from this bird that would attack her. I was fortunate enough to witness the occasion where she finally got revenge on the bird.

      It had been pecking at one of the grandkittens and then flew away just too low, and grandma cat did a lightning-fat swipe in the air and just kept walking along like nothing had happened, not looking at the bird. The bird kept flying and flapped its wings like 2 more times, then fell to the ground dead, completely ignored by the cat.

      It was the most badass samurai shit I’ve ever seen.

    • @datelmd5sum@lemmy.world
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      31 year ago

      Patience mostly I think. At least with rodent they smell a trail and then just sit there for hours and hours until one walks near enough.

    • @melpomenesclevage@lemm.ee
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      21 year ago

      They’re kind of the perfect predators, and birds need to land sometime.

      Basically their only weak point, biologically, is their kidneys.

    • Don’t know for birds but apparently they can win a fight with snake because they have better reaction time. So maybe something similar is contributing here too

  • @Lizardking27@lemmy.world
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    171 year ago

    Keeping your cats indoors won’t solve anything. Housecats aren’t destroying the bird population, feral cats are. If you want to help, volunteer with your local vet or animal control to capture, spay/neuter, then re-release stray cats.

      • That study’s been going around for years in the media, but mainly because it’s sensational. If you actually read the article, I’d hardly say it’s very convincing, or very accurate. Also, this.

        Existing estimates of mortality from cat predation are speculative and not based on scientific data13,14,15,16 or, at best, are based on extrapolation of results from a single study18. In addition, no large-scale mortality estimates exist for mammals, which form a substantial component of cat diets.

      • @Lizardking27@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        “About a third of the problem” So, not the primary cause (or solution.)

        https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms2380

        “We estimate that free-ranging domestic cats kill 1.3–4.0 billion birds and 6.3–22.3 billion mammals annually. Un-owned cats, as opposed to owned pets, cause the majority of this mortality.”

        The article also states the following regarding more popular studies in the media involving pet cats: “The magnitude of mortality they cause in mainland areas remains speculative, with large-scale estimates based on non-systematic analyses and little consideration of scientific data”

      • @MissJinx@lemmy.world
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        -11 year ago

        Indoor cats are not a problem because they are indoors. Outdoor cats thar come inside sometimes are a problem indeed but most of them were not adopted they just apeared out of nowhere and you now think it’s your cat. So it was feral at some point or at least was born from one.

    • @garbageman@lemmy.world
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      101 year ago

      It will solve for your cat staying not dead, not shitting in other people’s yards, and not fucking other cats.

  • @Xenon@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    On a serious note, the problem with wind turbines is not the total number of birds they strike but the species. Larger birds of prey seem particularly susceptible. Tough this risk can be easily mitigated by not placing the wind turbines directly in their primary habitat or migration paths.

    • @subtext@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I was going to say, I doubt your pet tabby is killing any California condors at any appreciable rate.

      Amazing how easy it is to bias people with data though.

    • @kurwa@lemmy.world
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      161 year ago

      I think windows are that high because birds think they can go through them, they probably don’t think they can go through buildings, but who knows?

      • KillingTimeItself
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        21 year ago

        i would assume so, but most sky scrapers are entirely glass, and those technically aren’t windows from the outside. So do those count?

        Though i guess they also have air patterns surrounding them that would make it difficult to bonk into.

    • @AndrasKrigare@beehaw.org
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      21 year ago

      Not sure if you’re making a joke, but windows kill birds because they’re transparent and birds fly into them not realizing it’s there. The rest of the building doesn’t really kill birds because they won’t fly into it.

      • KillingTimeItself
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        11 year ago

        mostly musing on the clarification of what a window is, because not all windows are transparent, in fact, the majority of them, i would venture to argue, are not.

        Skyscrapers are weird.

  • Dojan
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    71 year ago

    I misread it as “Widows” and got a bit concerned for a second.

  • @perishthethought@lemm.ee
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    61 year ago

    3.5 billion birds are killed in North America per year? I didn’t know anywhere near that number even existed.

    But then again…

    Wikipedia says there are about 7.5 million square miles in the US and Canada, so that’s over 400 birds killed per square mile, per year, on average.

    That’s amazing, no?

      • @perishthethought@lemm.ee
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        31 year ago

        I checked again and yeah, it’s more like 9.5 million square miles, so an average of more like 370 bird deaths per square mile, per year. But now that I know that includes chickens and turkeys, and Mexico and Greenland and the Bahamas, it’s OK.

    • @pafu@feddit.de
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      31 year ago

      There are more than 8 billion chickens slaughtered every year in the US alone, to give some perspective.