| Literature DB >> 30859105 |
Eugenia Natoli1, Livia Malandrucco1, Laura Minati1, Stefania Verzichi1, Raffaella Perino1, Laura Longo1, Francesca Pontecorvo1, Anna Faini1.
Abstract
Law no. 281, enacted by the Italian Parliament in 1991, was the first that aimed at managing urban free-roaming cats living in colonies, without killing and/or moving them from their site. It had been anticipated by the Lazio Regional Law no. 63/1988 and subsequently refined by the Lazio Regional Law no. 34/1997. These laws introduced: (i) the cats' right to live free and safe; (ii) the compulsory neutering of cats by the Veterinary Services of the Local Health Unit; (iii) the institutionalization of cat caretakers. Within this context, this paper intends to evaluate the effects of the application of the Italian laws on management of urban free-roaming cats for the years 1988 to 2018. To this end, some indicators have been built and applied to our activity data: number of censused colonies and number of cats; number of stable colonies due to neutering; number of hygiene and sanitary notifications; number of notifications to check cat welfare; number of bites by unowned free-roaming cats; number of notifications of cat poisoning. The number of citizens' requests for institutional interventions by public veterinary services in cat colonies management and, accordingly, the detection of cat colonies yet unknown, seem to confirm the interest of people to control the cat colonies in Rome in a humanitarian way, as evidenced in our data. This fact/phenomenon should be analyzed in its multiple dimensions, also including the many changes and social unrests which have affected the human-cat relationship in the last 30 years.Entities:
Keywords: Italy; control strategies; free-roaming domestic cats; management; no-kill policy; unowned domestic cats
Year: 2019 PMID: 30859105 PMCID: PMC6398421 DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2019.00031
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Vet Sci ISSN: 2297-1769
Indicators utilized to evaluate unowned domestic cat management in the urban environment of Rome.
| 1 | No. of censused colonies | 30 | Whole Rome/Local Health Unit Rome 3 |
| 2 | No. of cats | 30 | Whole Rome/Local Health Unit Rome 3 |
| 3 | No. of stable colonies due to neutering | 30 | Whole Rome/Local Health Unit Rome 3 |
| 4 | No. of hygiene and sanitary notifications | 10 | Local Health Unit Rome 3 |
| 5 | No. of notifications to check cat welfare | 10 | Local Health Unit Rome 3 |
| 6 | No. of bites by unowned cats | 10 | Whole Rome |
| 7 | No. of notifications of cat poisoning | 10 | Local Health Unit Rome 3 |
1988–2000 data collected from the whole city.
Figure 1Map of Rome. Colored areas show the jurisdiction of Local Health Unit Rome 3.
Figure 2Yearly trend of new censused cat colonies.
Figure 3Yearly trend of new censused cats.