Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Deadly cat poop behind calls for euthanasia

Hawaii grapples with feral felines, monk seal deaths

- By Jennifer Sinco Kelleher

HONOLULU — Two wildlife issues have collided in Hawaii, pitting one group of animal defenders against another in an impassione­d debate.

The point of contention? Deadly cat poop and the feral felines that produce it.

Federal researcher­s believe feces from the legions of stray cats roaming Hawaii are spreading a disease that is killing Hawaiian monk seals, some of the world’s most endangered marine mammals. Some conservati­onists advocate euthanizin­g those cats that no one wants, and that has cat lovers up in arms.

“It’s a very difficult, emotional issue,” said state Sen. Mike Gabbard, chairman of a committee that this year heard a proposal to ban the feeding of feral cats on state land. The panel abandoned the bill after an outcry.

The problem stems from a parasite common in cats that can cause toxoplasmo­sis, a disease that has killed at least five female Hawaiian monk seals and three males since 2001, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion.

“While eight seals may not sound like a lot of animals, it actually has pretty large ramificati­ons for an endangered population where there’s only about 1,300 seals in existence at this point in time,” said Michelle Barbieri, veterinary medical officer for NOAA’s Hawaiian monk seal research program.

Scientists believe monk seals become exposed by ingesting contaminat­ed water or prey.

Stray cats, meanwhile, have no predators in Hawaii and have ballooned in numbers across the state. Some 300,000 feral cats roam Oahu along, according to marketing research commission­ed by the Hawaiian Humane Society in 2015.

Felines are the only animals that can shed Toxoplasma gondii eggs, or oocysts. The parasites enter their digestive tract through infected prey, then multiply in the small intestine and produce eggs. Cats excrete the eggs in their feces, which researcher­s believe wash into the ocean and accumulate in invertebra­tes along the sea floor.

The eggs can survive in fresh water, saltwater and soil for up to two years, and any warm-blooded animal can become infected.

California sea otters have died from toxoplasmo­sis, and it’s one of the major reasons the Hawaiian crow, alala, is extinct in the wild. Toxoplasmo­sis is rarely problemati­c for people with healthy immune systems, but it’s why doctors advise pregnant women not to handle kitty litter.

Many cities struggle with feral cats, but the problem is particular­ly acute in Hawaii because of its sensitive ecosystem and at-risk native species, experts say.

Only two mammals are native to Hawaii: the hoary bat and the Hawaiian monk seal. “Everything else here — deer, sheep, goats, cats, mongoose — they’re all invasive. They’re all introduced,” said Angela Amlin, NOAA’s acting Hawaiian monk seal recovery coordinato­r.

Marine debris, climate change, predation and human interactio­n all threaten the survival of Hawaiian monk seals, agile swimmers with rigid whiskers and big, round eyes. Adults grow to be about 7 feet long and weigh between 400 and 600 pounds.

Feral cats present their greatest disease concern, Amlin said.

“As conservati­onists, what we really have to look at is this is what Hawaii’s native ecosystem includes, and cats are unfortunat­ely not part of that,” she said. “When it comes to the feral cat population, there should be a program in place to bring in these animals, adopt the ones that are adoptable and humanely euthanize those that are not.”

Others take offense to that notion.

Classifyin­g animals with labels such as native and invasive creates a “hierarchy in which the protection of certain animals comes at the suffering of others,” Hawaiian Humane Society President and CEO Pamela Burns wrote in a letter opposing the state bill that would have banned feeding cats on state land.

Those who care for stray cats advocate trapping, neutering and spaying to help control their population.

The University of Hawaii’s Manoa campus, in Honolulu, started a feral cat management program — with authorized feeders trained in tasks like trapping and feces disposal — after the stench and mess from hundreds of cats prompted complaints, especially when children at a campus day care center got flea bites, said Roxanne Adams, director of buildings and grounds.

The program started in 2011 and appears to have reduced the number of felines, she said.

Euthanizin­g cats is unacceptab­le unless they’re extremely sick, said Alicia Maluafiti, board president of animal welfare group Poi Dogs and Popoki.

“I totally disagree with the generaliza­tion that cat people love cats more than these endangered species,” Maluafiti said. “What we just don’t advocate is the wholesale killing, the exterminat­ion, of one species” for another.

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