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your earlier comment sounds like you're claiming that suburbia is so bereft of wildlife
Obviously some species do well (or at least don't suffer) from human proximity. My point was really that when species check out because humans move in, it's generally the humans who are the problem not the cats who accompany them
I'm not saying that cats are a population level threat, but your earlier comment sounds like you're claiming that suburbia is so bereft of wildlife ("uninhabitable") that there's nothing there that a cat could possibly kill anyway. That's really not true, especially when you consider all the parks, cemeteries, railway embankments and other assorted little wildlife havens that you can find in towns and cities.
(I'm still baffled at how non-house cat ownership is legal)