China Daily (Hong Kong)

COVID impact

Volunteers help care for cats on island after number of visitors drops amid pandemic

-

MANGARATIB­A, Brazil — All the locals knew the island just west of Rio de Janeiro was teeming with cats. They left food and even brought tourists.

Then the coronaviru­s pandemic hit, and human support dried up, resulting in a gruesome scene witnessed by fishermen: a group of cats devouring others’ corpses.

Furtada Island, referred to widely as “Island of the Cats”, is 20 minutes by motorboat from the city of Mangaratib­a, at one extreme of Brazil’s Green Coast, a vast swath of mountainou­s tropical forest and sandy coves dotted with hundreds of islands.

Over the years, fishermen tossed fish guts and any unneeded catch onto the island, while other kind souls left bowls of water and storebough­t cat food.

That has helped the island’s hundreds of residents stay fed, particular­ly the recently marooned cats that lack the skills of their wild-born brethren, which climb trees to raid birds’ nests.

When the pandemic forced people to quarantine, sank tourism and shut restaurant­s that dish up seafood, boat traffic around the island fell sharply — and with it, the food and water deposited there.

Locals did not realize the horror playing out on the island until the

fishermen reported back in April.

“The number of boats fell, the number of tourists, and we saw the condition of those animals on the island,” said Jorge de Morais, 58, who works with a local group that rescues animals from abuse. “So we mobilized.”

Donations put to work

He and other volunteers asked local businesses for donations. In April, they started installing rudimentar­y food and water dispensers, made from PVC pipes, and now make weekly trips to restock them.

On Tuesday, as cats milled about, de Morais and three others filled the dispensers on the small island, where thick vegetation spills down to meet a rocky shore.

“Cats that are recently discarded, they’re more sociable. You saw we can get close, pet them,” said Joice Puchalski, the coordinato­r for the volunteer group. “But not the feral ones. They’re all hidden,

and you see them at night, because of their eyes.”

The roughly 250 cats on the island trace their origins to a couple who were the only residents some two decades ago, Puchalski, 47, explained.

They decamped, leaving behind their two cats to do what most creatures, left to their own devices on a deserted island, would do.

Authoritie­s are looking into ways to stop people from abandoning animals on the island. It’s already a crime, but signs noting that have had little effect.

Karla de Lucas, who oversees animal protection in Rio state, inspected the “Island of the Cats” in June, and she met with the navy and environmen­tal authoritie­s to explore punishment­s.

Congress also passed a law last month increasing the penalties for mistreatme­nt of cats and dogs, including up to five years in prison.

 ??  ??
 ?? SILVIA IZQUIERDO / AP ?? A volunteer holds an injured abandoned cat on Brazil’s Furtada Island, also known as “Island of the Cats”, on Oct 13.
SILVIA IZQUIERDO / AP A volunteer holds an injured abandoned cat on Brazil’s Furtada Island, also known as “Island of the Cats”, on Oct 13.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China