04/17/2026
This is interesting information!! While our goal is to home the friendly ferals who thrive with humans, there are some that are just content and happy with their outdoor lives. I have two here that I thought were somewhat friendly but are very bonded and I had hoped to get them to Colony Cats Adoption Center but it didn’t work out so we just care for them here, keeping them warm, fed and loved. They also have a few other friends including “mama” who had her babies under our porch and we foster failed her two boys. She has never let us pet her and keeps her arms length distance but she knows this is her home and we are her family. They have all been trapped and sterilized. Get these babies fixed!!
People often claim that community cats living outside are miserable or always sick, just getting by. This perspective may come from good intentions, but it doesn't accurately reflect how these cats actually live.
Cats that have spent their entire lives outdoors, particularly in well-managed colonies, do just fine. For these cats, the outdoors is not exile; it’s their home. This isn't just a nice story. A growing body of research shows that community cats can be healthy and stable when people care for them.
When we view the outdoors as their true home, it changes our conversation about these cats. We can concentrate on smarter and kinder ways to care for them—methods that truly respect their lives.
What the studies show:
✔ Feral cats are healthy and stable
Large studies find that feral cats have health profiles nearly identical to indoor pet cats.
✔ Survival rates match those of owned cats
After TNR (trap-neuter-return), feral cats survive just as well as cherished pets.
✔ TNR improves life for cats
When cats are sterilized, they roam less, fight less, have lower stress, maintain better body condition, hunt less, and live longer. This is backed by data.
✔ TNR reduces intake and euthanasia rates in cities
In San José, euthanasia dropped by 83%.
In Baltimore, it fell by 82%.
In Jacksonville, both intake and euthanasia rates plummeted.
The bottom line: With TNR, cats live better, longer lives, and fewer end up in shelters where many face death.
“But what about wildlife?”
Let’s address that. Here’s what those against cats often overlook:
Their widely cited "2.4 billion birds" figure comes from computer models, not actual counts of dead birds outside.
It relies on worst-case scenarios and often double counts.
Real scientists have found flaws in this figure within peer-reviewed studies.
See for yourself:
Fenimore et al., 2020
https://www.felineresearch.org/post/issue-brief-wildlife-impacts-of-outdoor-cats?fbclid=IwY2xjawOij_JleHRuA2FlbQIxMQBicmlkETFNV09Xa0g3TG43ZmZ6bk9hc3J0YwZhcHBfaWQQMjIyMDM5MTc4ODIwMDg5MgABHsiEQic2fcf7MmW0KLLrUlFPnQpNe1_YiyxX3R6NAk33jffrQpQHNKBrrPSF_aem_137mbsEXsnRCQz7ZKXhsdw
Wolf & Schaffner, 2020
https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/veterinary-science/articles/10.3389/fvets.2018.00341/full
Ecosystems near human populations have adapted to the presence of community cats. These cats have been part of the landscape for hundreds of years; everything has reached a kind of balance. Remove those cats, and you disrupt that balance. TNR helps maintain stability.
If you’re a cat born outside, this is what you know:
- the sun on your back
- the earth under your paws
- your home turf
- your colony—your family
- the familiar rhythm of life
These cats are not dreaming of couches or windowsills they’ve never known. They’re not yearning for something else. They live the lives they were meant to lead, and TNR makes those lives healthier and safer.
This is not just wishful thinking. Ongoing research supports this.
Want proof? Here’s more peer-reviewed TNR research:
Levy et al. 2003 (colony stabilization)
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/12523478/
Spehar & Wolf 2017
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29088106/
Spehar & Wolf 2018
https://www.wellbeingintlstudiesrepository.org/aw_comp_globalcats_managementtnr/1/
Spehar & Wolf 2019
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31597301/
Kreisler et al. 2019
https://www.wellbeingintlstudiesrepository.org/aw_comp_globalcats_managementtnr/16/
AVMA TNR Resource
https://avmajournals.avma.org/view/journals/javma/243/4/javma.243.4.502.xml
HSUS TNR Overview
https://www.humaneworld.org/en/resources/outdoor-cats-faq
ASPCA Community Cats
https://www.aspca.org/helping-shelters-people-pets/closer-look-community-cats
The outdoors isn’t the problem; instability is.
TNR provides community cats with what they truly need:
- stability
- safety
- health
- dignity
- the chance to continue living their lives right where they belong
Every stabilized colony means protected lives. Every time a cat is fixed, we prevent suffering from starting. Every supporter—every like, share, and ally—creates change.