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Feral Cat Skull | Tasmania Roadkill

The best skulls of 9 cats I've gotten (myself or someone else has collected) as roadkill in the last 7 months.

Limited stock because most roadkill cat skulls are broken.

I've hand selected the most complete and those I could repair back to the original state.

All cats are checked for microchips and all cats, if, the remains are identifiable are posted in a local group of my hometown.

We have a lot of feral cats and live rurally. Skulls may not be purrfect, they may be missing 1-2 teeth missing. They may have slight cracking but nothing hugely noticeable.

The cat pictured may not be the one you received but you'll get your own unique cat skull that is equal in size and quality.

Disclaimers- All cats caught, culled or found by me and my associates are checked for microchips. If a cat is not microchipped, but a collar is present, all cat owners are tracked down and cats return home. I am very rural, any cats culled on my property are not pets these are feral cats that are abundant in Tasmania. Farmers in rural areas need to necessarily cull them to protect livestock from disease (toxoplasmosis) and smaller animals from becoming prey. Some rural properties will hire contract shooters, while other cats were collected from the roads and cleaned up as we do with all roadkill in my area to protect scavenging animals (tassie devils) from also becoming road victims.

 

All cats are scanned for microchips regardless. Even if they are very rural, if someone has dumped an animal, we want to know. Any cat found with microchips has the owners tracked down, or the cat is passed onto our local vet, and the situation is dealt with accordingly.

Dumping cats is extremely irresponsible but an activity that still occurs quite regularly. If you are caught dumping a cat or kittens, penalties apply.

All feral cats are culled on private property by authorised contract shooters; cats are not taken via trapping or culled by shooters in national parks, crown land, or private property unless authorised by the land holders to do so.

 

If you want to know more about managing feral and nuisance cats in Tasmania, visit the Cat Manangement Act 2009.

 

For further discussion, photos and continued information on feral cats, for the sake of transparency, you can search our Facebook page to bring up past discussions.

    $65.00Price
    Quantity
    Out of Stock

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