A semi-feral animal lives predominantly in a feral state but has some contact and experience with humans. This may be because it was born in a domesticated state and then reverted to life in wild conditions, or it may be an animal that grew up in essentially wild conditions but has developed a comfort level with humans through feeding, receiving medical care, or similar contacts.
Few living reindeer are truly wild. Many are herded in a semi-feral state.
Stray cats in Odessa
A naturally approached Camargue horse in northeastern Italy
Stray dog in Kolkata
A feral cat or a stray cat is an unowned domestic cat that lives outdoors and avoids human contact; it does not allow itself to be handled or touched, and usually remains hidden from humans. Feral cats may breed over dozens of generations and become an aggressive local apex predator in urban, savannah and bushland environments. Some feral cats may become more comfortable with people who regularly feed them, but even with long-term attempts at socialization, they usually remain aloof and are most active after dusk. Of the 700 million cats in the world, an estimated 480 million are feral.
A feral cat with a tipped ear, indicating it was neutered in a trap-neuter-return program
Feral cats in Largo di Torre Argentina, Rome. Photo by Paolo Monti, 1969.
Colony of semi-feral cats in Messina harbour. They are regularly fed by the local fishermen.
A farm cat