m
Remove some templates, interwiki links, delink non military terms, cleanup and move Wikipedia link above categories
(Import article) |
m (Remove some templates, interwiki links, delink non military terms, cleanup and move Wikipedia link above categories) |
||
'''Operation Cat Drop''' is the name commonly given to an account, of uncertain veracity, about the delivery, by the [[United Kingdom]]'s [[Royal Air Force]], of cats to a remote village in
It is not clear whether the events of the Operation Cat Drop story actually transpired as the story is commonly told or if the cats were ever delivered by parachute. While cats are indeed unusually susceptible to the toxic effects of DDT, and cat die-offs were a not unheard of side effect of malaria control operations, many aspects of the story have been called into question. For example, it was probably [[dieldrin]] rather than DDT which was used for malaria control in the region and caused numerous cat deaths.<ref name="pmid18799776">{{cite journal |author=O'Shaughnessy PT |title=Parachuting cats and crushed eggs the controversy over the use of DDT to control malaria |journal=Am J Public Health |volume=98 |issue=11 |pages=1940–8 |date=November 2008 |pmid=18799776 |pmc=2636426 |doi=10.2105/AJPH.2007.122523 |url=http://www.ajph.org/cgi/pmidlookup?view=long&pmid=18799776}}</ref>
==External links==
* [http://catdrop.com Catdrop.com]: a site prepared by Patrick T. O’Shaughnessy, an associate professor at the
* [http://www.strange-loops.com/scicatdrop.html Systems Thinking: Operation Cat Drop and Chaotic Kindness]
* {{cite journal |author=
* [http://www.flycatfly.com/parachuting-cats flycatfly.com]
* http://theindependent.sg/singapores-operation-cat-drop-which-saved-sarawakians-from-possible-disaster/
|