Results 191 to 200 of about 22,853 (239)
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Consider the (Feral) Cat: Ferality, Biopower, and the Ethics of Predation
Society & Animals, 2020Abstract Cats confound clear distinctions: not least that between the human and natural worlds. As a consequence, they are prime examples of “ferality”: a category of nonhuman subjects who are neither domestic, nor wild, but instead move between those realms.
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Dealing with feral cats: Part 2
Veterinary Nursing Journal, 2009The feral cat trap-neuter-return (TNR) is a well-proven and successful method of control; but only if applied correctly, with emphasis on getting all aspects of the process right. In the first part of this article (October 2009, Volume 23, Number 10), we looked at the trapping process.
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Use of Feral Cats in Psychotherapy
Anthrozoös, 1997Animal-assisted therapy typically involves the use of domesticated, well controlled animals that are trained to permit approach behavior and interaction by patients. This report describes the use of undomesticated, feral cats as adjuncts to psychotherapy. This approach provides advantages not attainable when domesticated pets are used.
Eileen S. Wells +2 more
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Dealing with feral cats: Part 1
Veterinary Nursing Journal, 2009We have probably all been to enough feline behaviour lectures to have heard the story of the domestication of the cat many times. As opportunist animals, cats realised the benefits of aligning themselves to humans, and colonies of cats developed around human settlements.
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Predation by feral cats upon lizards
1995(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
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