No one really knows how many cats and dogs there are – but the
pet owner marketing surveys published by APPA (American Pet Product Producers
Association) may shed some light. They
estimate there are about 164 million cats and 78 million dogs living in
American homes. Annual adoptions into
this population include about 12 million cats and 11 million dogs. Un-owned cats living outdoors in feral cat
colonies add to the total cat population –but again how many there are is
unknown. Estimates run as high as one
feral cat for every owned cat. Yet as we've seen through our spay/neuter program – the line is blurry between the two
groups and many “yard cats” may be double-counted.
Of the 12 million cats adopted out each year, only 500,000
are purebred cats purchased from breeders, and 2.5 million come from animal
shelter adoptions. The overwhelming
majority –9 million-- are cats that are literally found outdoors (feral, lost
or abandoned) or born to someone’s pet cat – and then kept or given to someone
else through a free cat ad or networking person-to-person with friends, relatives
and coworkers.
APPA doesn't distinguish, but we assume the majority of adoptions
are kittens and puppies – with most of the balance being young adults – often abandoned
or relinquished from homes that can’t afford to fix them. For –
once pets become sexually mature, they become increasingly challenging to care
for – even for the most loving guardians. Only 12% (or 20 million) of owned cats are
left intact – not because their guardians don’t understand the importance of
fixing them, but simply because they lack the front-end money to do so. Scare tactic population statistics aren't needed to drive home this point – all you have to do is live with one to
understand.
So why does PETA and many other otherwise responsible animal
organizations perpetuate these grossly misleading statistics? Perhaps they think that this is the best way
to show the importance of spaying and neutering cats or that it’s the best way
to justify the use of healthy cat euthanasia to manage shelter occupancy rates –
for according to the HSUS, 2.5 million cats and kittens are put down
prematurely in shelters annually – rough half of their total admissions. Whatever their reason, the result is a
distorted picture of the number of cats – one that may be more hurtful to them than helpful.
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