What the study found
The authors conclude that promoting cats as a rodent-control solution on Australian dairy farms is premature and unsubstantiated on the evidence currently described.
Why the authors say this matters
The study suggests that stronger evidence is needed before this approach is taken seriously, and the authors also state that broader ethical and regulatory reasons may make it inappropriate even if more evidence were available.
What the researchers tested
The article reviews a proposal to let farmers obtain desexed cats, at tax-deductible cost, for rodent control on their properties. The authors discuss what kinds of evidence would be needed, including monitoring rodent numbers, cat diets, cat movement and population size, and economic comparisons with other control options.
What worked and what didn't
The abstract reports enthusiastic endorsement from 15 dairy farmers across nine properties in Queensland and New South Wales, but says this is not enough to support the proposal. It states that evidence is still needed to show that cats suppress rodents effectively, how many cats would be required, whether cats prey on wildlife, whether unwanted immigration of cats occurs, and how the costs compare with other rodent-control methods.
What to keep in mind
The abstract does not present new experimental results from a cat program, and it does not report direct data showing effectiveness or failure. The authors explicitly frame their conclusion as a call for more evidence and note possible ethical and regulatory concerns beyond the available data.
Key points
- The authors say promoting cats for rodent control on Australian dairy farms is premature.
- They argue that stronger evidence is needed before the proposal is taken seriously.
- The abstract reports support from 15 dairy farmers on nine properties in Queensland and New South Wales.
- The authors say evidence is still needed on rodent suppression, cat numbers required, cat diets, wildlife predation, and cat population movement.
- They also note that ethical and regulatory concerns may make the approach inappropriate even if more evidence were available.
Disclosure
- Research title:
- Cats for rodent control on dairy farms are not yet supported
- Authors:
- Michael Charles Calver, Heather M. Crawford, Tim Kurz, J. A. L. Watson, Bruce L. Webber
- Institutions:
- Murdoch University, The University of Western Australia
- Publication date:
- 2026-01-29
- OpenAlex record:
- View
- Image credit:
- Photo by Erik_Karits on Pixabay · Pixabay License
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