How colourful collars can help reduce the number of birds killed by domestic cats - Action News
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British Columbia

How colourful collars can help reduce the number of birds killed by domestic cats

Study from the University of Northern B.C. seeks ways to offset cats' killer instincts with a warning system for birds.

Researchers find rainbow collars give early warning for birds, millions of which are killed by cats every year

Ken Otter says birds have good colour vision and that high-visibility cat collars appear to help birds avoid predatory house cats. (Ken Otter)

Rainbow coloured,high-visibility ruff collars forfree-roaming house cats can reducethe numberof birds the felines areable to kill, according to preliminary results from a study atthe University of Northern British Columbia in Prince George, B.C.

"Itlooks like the high-vizcollars work," said Professor Ken Otter, chairpersonof UNBC'sdepartment of ecosystem scienceand management.

Because birds have excellent colour vision, the flashy collars appear to providethebirds with an early warning system againststealth attacks by cats.

"To the bird, this rainbow colour stands out like a sore thumb," said Otter. "It's the opposite of a hunter's camo. "

Professor Ken Otter, shown here with his own house cat, Pekoe, hopes his research will help save birds by alerting them to cats on the hunt. (Betsy Trumpener/CBC )

Otter saysan initial study with 14 house cats and their owners showed the cats brought homefewer dead birds when wearing the rainbow collars. But concerns that cats could be a vector for COVID-19 with the potential to infect researchers meant his work was put on hold during the pandemic.

Otter hopes to recruitabout 40 more cats and owners in Prince George in the coming monthsto provide more "robust results."The owners will be asked to log any birds their cat kills during one week with the collar on and another with the collar off.

He says the research is important, because scientists estimateCanadian domestic cats kill between 150 million to 300 million birds a year, contributing to the overall declinein bird populations.

Collar bells not effective

Otter says hanging bells on cat collars isn't usually effective because cats learn to suppress the bell sound while they're hiding and standing still.

"By the time the cats pounce,it's too late ... for the bell ... to alert the birds."

He hopes high-visibility collars maygive cat owners a new tool for protecting birds.

"You can decrease the impact that your free-roaming cat is actually having," he said.

Collars don't hold back mousers

For people who rely on their cats to be mousers, Otter says his initial findings showed the multi-hued collarsdidn't affect the number of rodents, including house mice, the cats killed.

There was also evidence that the majority of house cats killjust a few birds, and only a very smallminority are "really prolific hunters."

Otter is collaborating with UNBCenvironmental and sustainability studies professor Annie Booth on a range of cat research projects.

Booth says these kind of studies are long overdue.

"One of the things that I think is really fascinating is just how little research there is on dogs and cats," Booth said.

"We always studied wildlife. Now, we're finally starting to see a real rise in interest in domestic animals, ournearest and dearest.Cats area very popular animal, but also very controversial, because people don't want to see their cats picking off birds at the bird feeder. "