Abstract

Poland's Animal Protection Act, as of 2002, made it legal to shoot free-ranging cats and dogs. The act triggered substantial social debate with opponents arguing that this legislation was weakly supported by scientific evidence of the ecological impacts of free-ranging pets. Our main research goal was to examine the activity of free-ranging domestic cats within a Polish protected area by applying radio-telemetry methods to determine space use and degree of encroachment into the national park. We trapped and radio-tracked 19 animals from three sites (focal households) located in Ojcow National Park (ONP) in southern Poland from June 2003 to March 2006. Annual 100% MCP home range size varied from 0.02km2 to 1.46km2, and was significantly larger for males (mean±SE=0.79±0.34km2; median=0.53km2) than for females (mean±SE=0.13±0.05km2; median=0.13km2). The distance travelled by individual cats from focal sites did not significantly differ between males (mean±SE=232.00±21.05m; median=191m) and females (mean±SE=232.50±12.47m; median=228m), with maximum distances of 1.5km for males and 1.1km for females. All monitored cats were in close proximity to nature reserves and ranged into protected areas without any human control. Cats living in the households in the park and its surrounding buffer zone, roaming at 200m and 1000m radius distances from their households, occupied from 6% to 100% of the park area, respectively. Our results reveal that free-ranging domestic cats roam through and potentially impact the entire national park, thus reducing its effective protected area.

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