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Should neutering pets be mandatory?

dogLeapingDogs have long been regarded as “man´s best friend” and cats are often considered adorable, but stray or abandoned animals pose a huge problem in Portugal and there’s no solution in sight.

It’s a worldwide conundrum. The European Union estimates there are about one hundred million homeless dogs and cats across the continent.

A single unspayed female dog and her offspring can produce 67,000 puppies in six years. A similar exponential calculation concludes that in seven years a single cat and her offspring can produce a population of 370,000.

In Portugal, despite updated protection laws and the dedicated work of veterinarians, municipal authorities and animal welfare charities, the problem of homeless animals continues to multiply.

Sterilisation – spaying females and castrating males - seems the most humane and practical means of control, yet it’s viewed by many people as cruel, immoral, or even religiously sinful. Traditional anti-sterilisation sentiment - especially about castration - is still common in Portugal.

So is the practice of dumping unwanted animals by the wayside or in rubbish bins. The threat of criminal prosecution, fines or even jail sentences for abuse or abandonment is frequently ignored.

Animals on the loose are vulnerable to malnutrition, injury and disease, as well as pregnancies that proliferate the suffering.

Conflicting and muddled attitudes on what to do about this are compounded when emotion takes precedence over rational thinking. Awareness education is increasingly needed.
But the real nub of the matter is money.

Pet animals are usually abandoned because owners are unable or unwilling to pay for basic food and medical essentials.

Abandoned dogs and cats that don’t perish from starvation, road accidents or mutilation in garbage trucks usually end up in municipal compounds or charity shelters, all of which struggle with limited funds. Taxpayers and donors foot the bills.

Municipal centres are overcrowded with unwanted animals. Before last year’s parliamentary decision to ban culling except in cases to relieve intolerable suffering, an estimated 100,000 street animals were being collected and “put down” in Portugal each year.

The ban was generally welcomed, but it is still controversial and has intensified the need for municipal facilities. The difficulty of rehoming municipal kennel and cattery inmates is acute. No one wants to adopt a pet unless it is lovable and certainly not if it is uncontrollably aggressive or feral.

Of course, dogs and cats support profitable businesses, notably veterinary clinics and suppliers of pet food.

Sterilisation may only be carried out by qualified and registered veterinary surgeons, and it generates a significant part of their income.

The going rates vary considerably between vets. Depending on weight, the charge for sterilising a male dog ranges from about €90 to €150, and for a female €150 to €300. For male cats, it costs about €50 to €65 and for females €80 to €125.

But vets will sterilise for charities at much lower prices. To avoid paying a vet the full rate, those who rescue one or more animals and want to arrange sterilisation can apply for a discount through a charity.

Animal welfare groups and municipal kennels and catteries are intensely busy. They operate independently with strong-minded leaders who have differing priorities.

It is understandable, therefore, why sterilisation campaigns in the Algarve have been sporadic, limited in scope and localised. There has been a lack of regional cohesion. Sterilisation laws exist elsewhere in various forms. Some places in the US, for example, demand that animals be sterilised by the age of four months.

It would be culturally difficult to introduce and strictly impose such legislation in Portugal. But one line of thinking here is that if mandatory sterilisation is not possible then it must be made much easier to arrange. Incentives could include lowering licensing and insurance costs for owners of neutered animals.

It is increasingly hard to find anyone - individuals or - willing or able to rehome animals. Facebook is full of applicants. There are simply too many abandoned dogs and cats in need of personal care.

Foreigner residents strongly support their Portuguese counterparts in animal charity work. And foreigners, including visitors, have been helping with the burden of rehoming by sending animals for adoption abroad, especially to the United Kingdom, Germany and the Netherlands.

The problem here is acute but mercifully less abhorrent than last week’s BBC revelations that cruel puppy breeding is taking place in the UK on “an industrial scale”. A criminal trade in puppies reaping hundreds of millions of pounds has been booming with the approach of Christmas. Many of the puppies will become unwanted in the New Year.

_________

 

Books by Len Port

Centenary Print Edition in Portuguese

Centenary Print Edition in Portuguese
On sale in bookshops in Portugal
 
 

Fátima eBook in English

Fátima eBook in English
An in-depth look at one of modern Christianity’s most intriguing series of events.
 
 

Available from Amazon

 
 

Conman Ken Book

Conman Ken Book
 
 
Author Lee Mackenzie has a website with a page called “Where’s Kenner?” www.thecharmingpredator.com

The Charming Predator
has been published by Penguin Random House:  HERE
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Comments  

+6 #5 nobulls hit 2017-11-27 10:36
THE SAME OLD STORY again and again... It's a (mainly) british malady and they absurdely say "it's for the well being of the animals"... Really? Well, for the well being of humanity I would castrate and sterilise some people (expecially certain politicians), I believe that should be mandatory if we want to save earth - Animals are certainly not contributing to wars and famine and pollution but we want to slowly eliminate them "for their well being"... how presumptuous and disgusting!
The more I know humans the more I love animals.
0 #4 Alice Tromm 2017-11-26 01:52
I have worked in 3 different shelters. Two in Portugal and 1 in Ayamonte. Once I had 16 cats in my house but with the help of Dutch and German animal rescue organisations, most found a forever home. I have now 8 cats of which 2 are foster cats and on my street are many stray cats but they are all sterilised and the street is feeding them. One street cat broke his leg and I took him to the vet, the bill was scared with Portuguese neighbours. This cat knows how to get into my house so he is a squatter and even sleeps here but in the morning he is gone. I always put a basket outside my door in the winter so cats can sleep there and some want to get inside as well. And my dog accepts this all. Living with 8-9 cats and the outside cats know that she is not aggressive. Dogs she doesn't like.
-5 #3 Peter Booker 2017-11-23 20:00
"in seven years a single cat and her offspring can produce a population of 370,000." Even a female cat requires some help, at least to begin with.

Len´s article sees no solution to the problem of loads of unwanted cats + dogs. Euthanasia has not worked. Sterilisation is a credible answer, but only if it is compulsory, and enforced. The alternative is continued abandonment of animals and discarding live puppies in rubbish bins. This outcome is increasingly not acceptable to the Algarve, as more northerners swing the balance of attitude in the population. And the indigenous population needs some education in this matter.
-4 #2 John Talbot 2017-11-23 12:06
As so many of us from northern Europe have found out; there are a wide range of socially acceptable behaviours that are or have been "culturally difficult to introduce and strictly impose such legislation in Portugal. ...."
But is Leonardo's comments entirely hinged on 'puppy farming' - or just the UK version that is filmed for public comment, and prosecution, on the BBC? An abhorrent but global problem - how many Portuguese still insist on a pedigree dog but these farms are 'protected' so we will never see them outed on Portuguese TV?
+3 #1 liveaboard 2017-11-23 11:06
Pet neutering borders on a religious belief among the animal rescue crowd.
Aside from the ridiculous claims in this article regarding reproduction numbers, I've heard that your dog will attack and eat you if not castrated.
Misinformation of this sort only discredits your argument.
Intentional breeding is the new evil, any such activity automatically labeled cruel exploitative capitalism. We're told we should all re home abandoned traumatized animals of unknown origin instead.
The rescue organizations do great work, collecting and caring for abandoned animals. Many good people accept abandoned the dogs and cats and love them.
The new laws may even be enforced some day, but time and money is required.
In the meantime, please don't tell us responsible pet owners what animals we may obtain, and whether or not to mutilate their genitalia and decimate their hormone balance.
That's an extreme overstep, and will not advance your cause.

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