Attitudes and Behaviours Towards Cats and Barriers to Stray Cat Management in Bulgaria.

IF 1.4 3区 农林科学 Q2 VETERINARY SCIENCES
Ivet Vasileva, Steven P McCulloch
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This research uses an online questionnaire (n = 1148) to survey the Bulgarian public's attitudes and behaviors toward owned and stray cats and explore potential barriers to stray cat population management. Generally, the survey participants indicated positive attitudes toward stray cats, with 82.0% of the respondents reporting feeling sorry for stray cats. Semi-ownership behaviors were prevalent, with 82.5% feeding stray cats but only 18.1% neutering the cats they fed, posing a barrier to stray cat management. Overall, the respondents held mixed attitudes toward neutering. Of all cat owners sampled (n = 859) only 47.2% had neutered all their cats and 44.4% of owners allowed cats outdoor access or their cats lived exclusively outdoors. Multinomial logistic regression predicted that intact cats were more likely to be allowed to roam free and reproduce, which may present a significant barrier to stray cat population management. This is the first academic survey on attitudes toward cats in Bulgaria and the findings should contribute to stray cat management and ultimately improve feline welfare.

保加利亚人对猫的态度和行为以及流浪猫管理的障碍。
本研究使用在线问卷(n = 1148)调查保加利亚公众对自有猫和流浪猫的态度和行为,并探究 流浪猫种群管理的潜在障碍。总体而言,调查参与者对流浪猫持积极态度,82.0%的受访者表示对流浪猫感到遗憾。82.5%的受访者会喂养流浪猫,但只有 18.1%的受访者会对所喂养的流浪猫进行绝育,这也 是流浪猫管理的一个障碍。总体而言,受访者对绝育的态度不一。在所有被抽样调查的猫主人中(n = 859),只有 47.2% 的猫主人为其所有猫咪做了绝育手术,44.4% 的猫主人允许猫咪在户外活动或其猫咪只在户外生活。多项式逻辑回归预测,绝育后的猫咪更有可能被允许自由漫步和繁殖,这可能会成为流浪猫数量管理的一大障碍。这是保加利亚首次对猫的态度进行学术调查,调查结果将有助于流浪猫的管理,并最终改善猫科动物的福利。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
6.70%
发文量
52
审稿时长
>36 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Applied Animal Welfare Science (JAAWS) publishes articles on methods of experimentation, husbandry, and care that demonstrably enhance the welfare of nonhuman animals in various settings. For administrative purposes, manuscripts are categorized into the following four content areas: welfare issues arising in laboratory, farm, companion animal, and wildlife/zoo settings. Manuscripts of up to 7,000 words are accepted that present new empirical data or a reevaluation of available data, conceptual or theoretical analysis, or demonstrations relating to some issue of animal welfare science. JAAWS also publishes brief research reports of up to 3,500 words that consist of (1) pilot studies, (2) descriptions of innovative practices, (3) studies of interest to a particular region, or (4) studies done by scholars who are new to the field or new to academic publishing. In addition, JAAWS publishes book reviews and literature reviews by invitation only.
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