Identificador persistente para citar o vincular este elemento: https://accedacris.ulpgc.es/jspui/handle/10553/154471
Título: Territorial Constraints on Trap-Neuter-Return in Insular Landscapes: Demographic and Ecological Implications of a Conservation-Oriented Policy
Autores/as: Manzanares Fernandez, Ruth
Martínez Campo, Jose
Travieso Aja, María Del Mar 
Pérez Luzardo, Octavio Luis 
Clasificación UNESCO: 240106 Ecología animal
3105 Peces y fauna silvestre
Palabras clave: Environmental Carrying-Capacity
Population
Management
Island
Cats, et al.
Fecha de publicación: 2025
Publicación seriada: Animals 
Resumen: Managing community cats on islands requires reconciling animal-welfare mandates with biodiversity protection under real operational constraints. In the Canary Islands (Spain), national Law 7/2023 endorses ethical, non-lethal colony management, while subsequent regional resolutions restrict TNR in and around protected areas, narrowing municipal room for action. We combine a multilevel governance assessment with stochastic demographic simulations parameterized from official records to compare three sterilization regimes over 20 years. The intensive regime (approximate to 60-70%/year) reflects the coverage threshold previously identified by Spain-based modelling and field evaluations and adopted in national program guidance; the 20%/year regime represents the pre-resolution baseline widely observed across the archipelago up to December 2024; and the 4%/year regime reflects the post-resolution reality, with abrupt declines in sterilizations, operations largely confined to urban cores, and program suspensions in multiple municipalities. Minimal (4%) and low (20%) efforts produce rapid population growth, bringing numbers close to the assumed carrying capacity under our deliberately high-K configuration and sustaining high densities and associated welfare and ecological risks; only sustained high-coverage TNR prevents saturation and produces progressive declines across island contexts. Under insular constraints, outcomes are determined by achievable coverage rather than regulatory intent; aligning policy and implementation to secure continuous, high-coverage TNR-particularly in risk-sensitive areas with appropriate safeguards-offers a feasible pathway to meet animal-welfare obligations while limiting ecological pressure.
URI: https://accedacris.ulpgc.es/jspui/handle/10553/154471
ISSN: 2076-2615
DOI: 10.3390/ani15243576
Fuente: Animals[ISSN 2076-2615],v. 15 (24), (Diciembre 2025)
Colección:Artículos
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