Illustration by Bigshot Toyworks
Inside an animal-lover civil war.
By Jessica Pressler: All winter, Peter Marra’s children had been
pestering him to get a cat. It was ironic, he thought as he walked up
the snowy path to his modern farmhouse in Takoma Park, Maryland, just
outside Washington, D.C. Especially now, when the country’s cat lobby
had him pegged as the Josef Mengele of felines. In his years as a
research scientist at the Smithsonian Zoo’s Migratory Bird Center, Marra
had produced many studies on different threats to bird life, like glass
buildings and wind turbines, but none received as much attention as
those featuring cats. Since its publication in the January issue of the
journal
Nature Communications, his team’s paper, “The Impact of
Free-Ranging Domestic Cats on Wildlife of the United States,” which
placed the number of birds felled by felines at 1.4 billion to 3.7
billion per year, had been picked up by most major media outlets,
including the New York
Times. Marra was proud, although when he saw the front-page headline, “
That Cuddly Kitty Is Deadlier Than You Think,” accompanied by a photo of a tabby with its jaws clenched around the neck of a rabbit, he braced himself for an onslaught...
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