Furry neighbours: Acceptability of feeding and managing free‐ranging dogs and cats in an urban area

Abstract There is an increasing interest in researching urban invasion. When invasive species establish and spread in urban areas, their management becomes particularly challenging given the influence of public presence and perceptions. Cultural, religious, and moral values play a crucial role in sh...

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Main Authors: Danial Nayeri, Pourya Sardari, Fateme Zahra Raisi, Zahra Ghorbanian, Jenny Anne Glikman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2025-02-01
Series:People and Nature
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/pan3.10768
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author Danial Nayeri
Pourya Sardari
Fateme Zahra Raisi
Zahra Ghorbanian
Jenny Anne Glikman
author_facet Danial Nayeri
Pourya Sardari
Fateme Zahra Raisi
Zahra Ghorbanian
Jenny Anne Glikman
author_sort Danial Nayeri
collection DOAJ
description Abstract There is an increasing interest in researching urban invasion. When invasive species establish and spread in urban areas, their management becomes particularly challenging given the influence of public presence and perceptions. Cultural, religious, and moral values play a crucial role in shaping public perceptions toward management strategies for invasive species. Free‐ranging dogs (FRDs) and free‐ranging cats (FRCs) are among the urban invasive species that bring health, safety, and wildlife conservation concerns. However, given their close relationship with people controlling their populations is challenging. We surveyed 500 residents of Karaj city in northern Iran to understand the behaviour of feeding FRDs and FRCs by people, as well as to uncover residents' acceptability of different control measures, focusing on culling FRDs and FRCs under different scenarios. We used generalized linear mixed models and cumulative link mixed models to address the issues of feeding FRDs and FRCs and acceptability of culling them respectively. We found that more than half of the respondents fed FRDs and FRCs (63% and 59%, respectively), and among those who fed FRDs and FRCs, 74.8% and 78.2% respectively used food leftovers from home to feed these animals. Furthermore, around half and one‐third of respondents provided FRDs and FRCs outside their neighbourhoods, respectively. We also found that the religious belief of dogs being ritually impure (Najis) was a significant predictor for both feeding and culling FRDs. People who held the belief that dogs are Najis were more inclined toward culling and less willing to feed FRDs. Moreover, we found polarized and conflicting views concerning culling in higher‐intensity scenarios involving attacks on people and disease spread. On the contrary, in less‐intense scenarios such as attacks on wildlife and population control in urban areas, most respondents disagreed with culling. In the end, we recommend (1) an improved waste management system for food residuals and leftovers that provide resources for FRDs and FRCs, (2) effective communication with pet‐owners to reduce feeding FRDs and FRCs and (3) bottom‐up de‐escalation of the conflict between polarized groups about culling FRDs and FRCs before it reaches to a destructive phase. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.
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spelling doaj-art-918f7c02262b44f29f30fc6370a2b4be2025-02-06T05:27:38ZengWileyPeople and Nature2575-83142025-02-017237338610.1002/pan3.10768Furry neighbours: Acceptability of feeding and managing free‐ranging dogs and cats in an urban areaDanial Nayeri0Pourya Sardari1Fateme Zahra Raisi2Zahra Ghorbanian3Jenny Anne Glikman4Human Dimensions of Natural Resources Lab, Department of Rangeland, Wildlife & Fisheries Management Texas A&M University College Station Texas USAHuman Dimensions of Natural Resources Lab, Department of Rangeland, Wildlife & Fisheries Management Texas A&M University College Station Texas USADepartment of Environmental Sciences, Faculty of Natural Resources University of Tehran Karaj IranDepartment of Agricultural Extension and Education, College of Agricultural Economics and Development University of Tehran Karaj IranInstituto de Estudios Sociales Avanzados (IESA‐CSIC) Córdoba SpainAbstract There is an increasing interest in researching urban invasion. When invasive species establish and spread in urban areas, their management becomes particularly challenging given the influence of public presence and perceptions. Cultural, religious, and moral values play a crucial role in shaping public perceptions toward management strategies for invasive species. Free‐ranging dogs (FRDs) and free‐ranging cats (FRCs) are among the urban invasive species that bring health, safety, and wildlife conservation concerns. However, given their close relationship with people controlling their populations is challenging. We surveyed 500 residents of Karaj city in northern Iran to understand the behaviour of feeding FRDs and FRCs by people, as well as to uncover residents' acceptability of different control measures, focusing on culling FRDs and FRCs under different scenarios. We used generalized linear mixed models and cumulative link mixed models to address the issues of feeding FRDs and FRCs and acceptability of culling them respectively. We found that more than half of the respondents fed FRDs and FRCs (63% and 59%, respectively), and among those who fed FRDs and FRCs, 74.8% and 78.2% respectively used food leftovers from home to feed these animals. Furthermore, around half and one‐third of respondents provided FRDs and FRCs outside their neighbourhoods, respectively. We also found that the religious belief of dogs being ritually impure (Najis) was a significant predictor for both feeding and culling FRDs. People who held the belief that dogs are Najis were more inclined toward culling and less willing to feed FRDs. Moreover, we found polarized and conflicting views concerning culling in higher‐intensity scenarios involving attacks on people and disease spread. On the contrary, in less‐intense scenarios such as attacks on wildlife and population control in urban areas, most respondents disagreed with culling. In the end, we recommend (1) an improved waste management system for food residuals and leftovers that provide resources for FRDs and FRCs, (2) effective communication with pet‐owners to reduce feeding FRDs and FRCs and (3) bottom‐up de‐escalation of the conflict between polarized groups about culling FRDs and FRCs before it reaches to a destructive phase. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.https://doi.org/10.1002/pan3.10768Canis familiariscullingFelis catushuman dimensionsinvasive speciesIran
spellingShingle Danial Nayeri
Pourya Sardari
Fateme Zahra Raisi
Zahra Ghorbanian
Jenny Anne Glikman
Furry neighbours: Acceptability of feeding and managing free‐ranging dogs and cats in an urban area
People and Nature
Canis familiaris
culling
Felis catus
human dimensions
invasive species
Iran
title Furry neighbours: Acceptability of feeding and managing free‐ranging dogs and cats in an urban area
title_full Furry neighbours: Acceptability of feeding and managing free‐ranging dogs and cats in an urban area
title_fullStr Furry neighbours: Acceptability of feeding and managing free‐ranging dogs and cats in an urban area
title_full_unstemmed Furry neighbours: Acceptability of feeding and managing free‐ranging dogs and cats in an urban area
title_short Furry neighbours: Acceptability of feeding and managing free‐ranging dogs and cats in an urban area
title_sort furry neighbours acceptability of feeding and managing free ranging dogs and cats in an urban area
topic Canis familiaris
culling
Felis catus
human dimensions
invasive species
Iran
url https://doi.org/10.1002/pan3.10768
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AT fatemezahraraisi furryneighboursacceptabilityoffeedingandmanagingfreerangingdogsandcatsinanurbanarea
AT zahraghorbanian furryneighboursacceptabilityoffeedingandmanagingfreerangingdogsandcatsinanurbanarea
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