The
cat returns readily to a
feral state if it has not been socialized when young. Feral cats, especially if left to proliferate, are frequently considered to be pests in both rural and urban areas, and may be blamed for devastating the
bird,
reptile, and
mammal populations. A local population of feral cats living in an urban area and using a common food source is sometimes called a
feral cat colony. As feral cats multiply quickly, it is difficult to control their populations. Animal shelters attempt to adopt out feral cats, especially kittens, but often are overwhelmed with sheer numbers and
euthanasia is used. In rural areas of the US, excessive numbers of feral cats are often shot. The "
trap-neuter-return" method has been used in many locations as an alternative means of managing the feral cat population. Their ancestors, the
aurochs, were aggressive, similar to the modern
Cape buffalo. Modern cattle, especially those raised on open range, are generally more docile, but when threatened can display aggression. Cattle, particularly those raised for
beef, are often allowed to roam quite freely and have established long term independence in
Australia,
New Zealand and several Pacific Islands along with small populations of semi-feral animals roaming the southwestern United States and northern
Mexico. Such cattle are variously called
mavericks, scrubbers or cleanskins. Most free roaming cattle, however untamed, are generally too valuable not to be eventually rounded up and recovered in closely settled regions.
Horses and
donkeys, domesticated about 5000 BCE, are
feral in open grasslands worldwide. In
Australia, they are known as
Brumbies; in the
American west, they are called
mustangs. Other isolated feral populations exist, including the
Chincoteague Pony and the
Banker horse. They are often referred to as "
wild horses", but this is a misnomer. There are truly "wild" horses that have never been domesticated, most notably
Przewalski's horse. While the horse was originally indigenous to North America, the wild ancestor died out at the end of the
last ice age. In both Australia and the Americas, modern "wild" horses descended from domesticated horses brought by European explorers and settlers that escaped, spread, and thrived. Australia hosts a
feral donkey population, as do the
Virgin Islands and the American southwest. s The
pig has established feral populations worldwide, including in Australia, New Zealand, the United States,
New Guinea and the Pacific Islands. Pigs were introduced to the Melanesian and Polynesian regions by humans from several thousand to 500 years ago, and to the Americas within the past 500 years. In Australia, domesticated pigs escaped in the 18th century, and now cover 40 percent of Australia, with a population estimated at 30 million. While pigs are thought to have been brought to New Zealand by the original Polynesian settlers, this population had become extinct by the time of European colonization, and all feral pigs in New Zealand today are descendants of European stock. Many European wild boar populations are also partially descended from escaped domestic pigs and are thus feral animals within the native range of the ancestral species. s in
Bangalore, Karnataka, India in
Tasmania,
Australia. Also known as a ringneck dove or ring dove (
Streptopelia risoria)
Rock doves were formerly kept for their
meat or more commonly as racing animals and have established
feral populations in cities worldwide. Colonies of
honey bees often escape into the wild from managed
apiaries when they
swarm; their behavior, however, is no different from their behavior in captivity, unless they breed with other feral honey bees of a different genetic stock, which may lead them to become more docile or more aggressive (see
Africanized bees). Large colonies of
feral parrots are present in various parts of the world, with
rose-ringed parakeets,
monk parakeets and
red-masked parakeets (the latter of which became the subject of the documentary film,
The Wild Parrots of Telegraph Hill) being particularly successful outside of their native habitats and adapting well to suburban environments.
Wild cocks are derived from
domestic chickens (
Gallus gallus domesticus) who have returned to the wild. Like the
red junglefowl (the closest wild relative of domestic chickens), wild cocks will take flight and roost in tall trees and bushes in order to avoid predators at night. Wild cocks typically form social groups composed of a dominant cockerel, several hens, and subordinate cocks. Sometimes the dominant cockerel is designated by a fight between cocks. ==Effects of feralization==