Understanding the Factors Influencing Cat Containment: Identifying Opportunities for Behaviour Change

Author:

Ma Gemma C.12ORCID,McLeod Lynette J.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Sydney School of Veterinary Science, The University of Sydney, Camperdown, NSW 2006, Australia

2. Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals New South Wales, Yagoona, NSW 2199, Australia

3. School of Psychology, Speech & Hearing, The University of Canterbury, Christchurch 8041, New Zealand

Abstract

There are over 5 million pet cats in Australia managed on a spectrum from fully indoors to completely outdoor free roaming. Roaming cats threaten biodiversity, can create a nuisance and are at risk of accidents and injury. Hence, there is substantial interest in behaviour change interventions to increase cat containment. An online questionnaire collected information on cat owner demographics, the number of cats owned, current containment behaviours and an agreement with 15 capability, opportunity and motivation (COM) items. Responses were received from 4482 cat owners. More than half (65%) indicated that they currently keep their cat(s) fully contained. Another 24% practiced a night curfew. Owners’ psychological capability had the greatest influence on containment behaviour. Motivation (community- and cat welfare-framed), living in an apartment and renting were also associated with a greater likelihood of containment. Cat owners not currently containing their cats could be divided into six profiles who differed on agreement with COM themes, age, future intentions, current behaviour, location and gender. Understanding differences between cat owner segments can assist with designing behaviour change interventions. Increasing cat owners’ psychological capability to contain their cats and encouraging the adoption of a night curfew as a first step towards 24 h containment are recommended.

Funder

Government of New South Wales

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Veterinary,Animal Science and Zoology

Reference55 articles.

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