Chris Lepczyk
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
There's lots of reports of incidences that we don't really think are kind of what cats are doing day to day, but the animal welfare and vet med records really show that
You know, the cats are doing what cats do.
And as a result, they run into a lot of risky behavior.
And it's either severe trauma, which costs a lot of money, or, you know, it results in the loss of a cat.
And, you know, even to give you an example here in Auburn, we have a lot of coyotes and many cats are just a loss to the coyotes that live in the city.
I mean, I think there's really great camera studies where people both in the U.S.
and then in places like New Zealand and Australia have put small cameras on cats and watched where they go.
Yeah.
And, and, you know, just sometimes they go further than we think, um, you know, so they can travel far, a lot farther than just your yard or the next yard over.
Some cats really don't move that far.
Um, you know, we're finding this out about all animals now that we can really track where they are in the environment.
They just, they go places we did not really understand because many animals don't spend their time out in the open saying, Hey, come find us right there trying to be sneaky or they're going to go where it's shady or whatever.
Their activity times are not when we're out looking.
So, you know, cats move pretty widely.
They engage a lot of other animals in ways that we don't always think, including other cats.
And we found a lot of information, you know, over the years now with cats eating just a wide variety of different animals or cats.
Killing those animals, but not necessarily eating them just from putting cameras on.
I mean, if we think about how they're distributed in the world, they are because they've really been one of the most widespread animals that people have moved around on the planet.
And they exist in many locations that we would not think very feasible.
That doesn't mean they're living well, but they are surviving.