Mid Canterbury could be on course for introducing some form of cat management policy after conservationists asked for help to keep bird songs ringing out.

The Ashburton District Council will investigate a cat policy after a request from the Methven and Foothill Birdsong Initiative.

Project representatives Barry Maister and Mac McElwain went to the district’s biodiversity advisory group on Tuesday asking for them to recommend the council introduce a cat management policy.

The group — consisting of representatives from groups such as Federated Farmers, DOC, ECan, Fish and Game, Forest and Bird, the birdsong initiative, as well as the council — supported the recommendation.

McElwain said the impacts of cats on biodiversity were well known but it was “more of a people issue”.

“We don’t have as many responsible cat owners as we should.”

If they can’t get on top of the problem cats, the birdsong project would fail, he said.

A landscape concept plan was being considered by the Methven Community Board and the council to develop a 2.5 hectare block of vacant council-owned land beside an established planting area, known as the Garden of Harmony, with the objective to increase the native birdsong in Methven.

A trapping programme in Methven has already removed around 80 possums, plenty of hedgehogs, rats, mice and a stoat in three months.

Standing in the way was how they manage the town’s cat population.

McElwain said desexing was the most important aspect of managing the population while microchipping and registration ensured the safety of pet cats if they were caught in the trap.

Ninety-seven cats caught in last seven years

Council ecologist and biodiversity advisor Christian Chukwuka said feral cats were an increasing issue in the foothills and high country areas.

The Lake Heron Conservation Society’s trapping has caught 97 cats in the last seven years, he said.

“The question to ask is where are these cats coming from as there are about three or four houses up there.”

Cats were hunters and are migrating from urban centres into the rich food-source high-country areas, he said.

“It is something that we need to tackle and see how we can manage that population, or it will be a big issue for our biodiversity – not in Methven or Ashburton, but along the rivers and high country.”

Ashburton Mayor Neil Brown questioned whether a policy would achieve the desired results or “is there another way?”

The group recommended the council investigated a cat management policy.

That report would consider what other councils did.

The Selwyn District Council updated its Keeping Animals, Poultry and Bees Bylaw in July 2022 to require all domestic cats in the district over the age of four months to be microchipped and registered.

Selwyn’s Head of Regulatory, Susan Atherton, said the council did not manage cats and did not charge a fee as there was no national legislation requiring compulsory registration of cats — unlike dogs.

“Microchipping and registration on a companion pet register gives pet owners confidence that trapped cats may be identified as pets and can assist in reuniting them with their owners.

“The cost of microchipping and registration of cats is covered by the cat owners.”

The microchipping cost was around $15-20 plus vet fee, while registrations with NZCAR were a one-off fee of $15.

LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.

Share.