Texarkana Gazette

Galveston considers oral birth control for feral cat population

- By Keri Heath

Galveston County Daily News

GALVESTON, Texas—An oral birth control program for felines could help reduce the population of feral cats, Galveston Island Humane Society spokespeop­le said.

The Galveston County Daily News reports while the organizati­on is still investigat­ing the project, oral contracept­ive methods could supplement an island program in which people trap strays and have them neutered and vaccinated and then released, Caroline Dorsett-Pate, society executive director, said.

The trap-neuter-release program has been officially under way for three years and had neutered about 2,200 cats as of August, DorsettPat­e said.

“The problem is, you can’t really catch every cat,” Dorsett-Pate said. “We’re kind of looking at options that might help to decrease the breeding that’s occurring as we continue to trap.”

As an initial pilot, volunteers would test the birth control, composed of a low dose megestrol acetate, in specific areas, Animal Shelter Advisory Committee member Wayne Holt said.

Holt has been heading the research assessing the birth control program’s feasibilit­y in Galveston.

“The surgical sterilizat­ion through trap and neuter is preferred,” Holt said. “It’s a tool or a method to fill in the gap.”

The oral birth control would allow the neutering program to make inroads on the feral cat population, he said.

However, island ornitholog­ists wonder how effective a neutering or birth control program would be.

“We are obviously losing many of our species of songbirds,” Jim Stevenson, executive director of the Galveston Ornitholog­ical Society, said.

Euthanasia could provide an alternativ­e that would save feral cats from a brutal life on the streets and protect native birds, he said.

“It seems like with an unwanted animal that it’s costing money to keep alive, at some point they should be put down painlessly,” Stevenson said. “If we can’t kill them, I think a reasonable compromise would be a really large shelter where the cats can live out their lives, neutered.”

He wants cats off the streets, where they could continue killing birds, he said.

Holt, with the shelter advisory board, agreed the oral contracept­ive program isn’t ideal. Cats must consume the medicine regularly and in regular doses for it to be effective, he said.

Controllin­g the island’s cat population has been a battle for years, Marte Hersey said.

She volunteers with the humane society and assists coordinati­on of the neutering program.

After Hurricane Ike hit Galveston in September 2008, the island feral cat population was down to about 500, she said. Now, the population is closer to 3,200, she said.

Her ultimate goal is to reduce the feral cat population as much as possible, Hersey said.

“That wasn’t the intention for cats to live outside, so it’s not as humane by them,” Hersey said. “It’s not necessaril­y a great life by them.”

She agrees feral cats kill birds and leave feces in their colonies, especially because Galveston cats are concentrat­ed in a few areas, she said.

The humane society and animal shelter committee now await approval from the Texas Board of Veterinary Medical Examiners to move forward with a pilot version of the oral birth control project, Holt said.

“We are obviously losing many of our species of songbirds.” —Jim Stevenson, executive director of the Galveston Ornitholog­ical Society

 ?? Kelsey Walling/The Galveston County Daily News via AP ?? ■ A kitten sticks its paw through the kennel door Friday at the Galveston Island Humane Society. An oral birth control method for feral cats would supplement the current trap, neuter and release program.
Kelsey Walling/The Galveston County Daily News via AP ■ A kitten sticks its paw through the kennel door Friday at the Galveston Island Humane Society. An oral birth control method for feral cats would supplement the current trap, neuter and release program.

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