COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) – The Humane Society of the Pikes Peak Region (HSPPR) has spayed or neutered over 1,100 feral cats so far this year alone through its Trap Neuter-Return (TNR) program – a population control effort that the shelter says could prevent the birth of hundreds of thousands of additional feral cats.
The shelter said it hosted a mass TNR event on Sept. 11. With help from nonprofits JJ’s Helping Paws and Happy Cats, HSPPR said it set traps in 15 different spots and cared for 4 separate feral cat colonies.
Over the day, the groups examined and vaccinated 72 cats in total, spaying 37 females and neutering 35 males, HSPPR said.
With each unspayed female cat potentially responsible for over 15,000 descendants over the course of five years, Thursday’s event alone may have prevented the addition of over half a million feral cats in the community, HSPPR said.
The shelter said so far this year, 1,122 cats have gone through its TNR program, which works to not only stabilize feral cat population numbers but also improve the cats’ quality of life, HSPPR said…