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Tails talk

IA 10:44 PM Add Comment The Amazing Feline Body
A cat’s tail is a great communicator, as every cat owner knows. When excited, the cat’s tail flicks quickly from side to side. If it is still...
Jumping, pouncing, etc.

Jumping, pouncing, etc.

IA 10:44 PM Add Comment The Amazing Feline Body
jumping ability, for the cat can jump six times her own length. (And that’s from a still position, not a running leap.) This comes from the...
Sprinters, not long-distance runners

Sprinters, not long-distance runners

IA 10:44 PM Add Comment The Amazing Feline Body
cheetah . Talk of the cheetah’s amazing speed has to be accompanied by a disclaimer: very fast, but only for short distances. Every cat, ...
Gut juices

Gut juices

IA 10:44 PM Add Comment The Amazing Feline Body
saliva as the first digestive fluid to start working on the food, but cat saliva contains hardly any ptyalin, the enzyme that breaks down sta...

“Hair up!” in Latin

IA 10:44 PM Add Comment The Amazing Feline Body
Let’s learn some hair-related Latin terms: piloerection (“hair standing up”) and arrector pili (“raiser of hair”). Piloerection occurs in hu...
Do cats freckle?

Do cats freckle?

IA 10:44 PM Add Comment The Amazing Feline Body
calico develop freckles as they age, with the spots appearing on their eyelids, mouth, nose and paw pads—in short, on all the exposed areas...
Chest appendices

Chest appendices

IA 10:44 PM Add Comment The Amazing Feline Body
country expression. Well, most male mammals (including humans) have teats, and they are all useless. A male cat has five or six pairs and th...
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Entri Populer

  • Cardinal Richelieu
    Armand Jean du Plessis (1585–1642) is better known as Cardinal Richelieu, the chief minister of France’s King Louis XIII and just as autocra...
  • Stud jowls
    Just as old male orangutans develop distinctive fleshy cheek patches, older tomcats—unneutered toms—develop “stud jowls,” a widening at the ...
  • The dreaded hairball!
    digestive tract. Some cats never get them (my own hasn’t—knock on wood); some cats get them rarely and vomit them up with no harm to them...
  • “Cat on its brain”
    Here’s an old British weather tidbit: “Cat on its brain, it’s going to rain.” This expression refers to a cat’s nap pose: curled up so the t...
  • Tabby, the “default” setting
    If domestic cats were left to breed on their own, with zero interference from humans, there would be very few longhaired cats and very few s...
  • The infamous saber-tooths
    house cats, but in some way the ferocious saber-tooth cats are among the ancestors of today’s pets (or, at any rate, of cats in general). T...
  • Love bites
    Cats, like most animals, have sex strictly for reproduction, and so it only takes place when the female is fully fertile. Part of the brief ...
  • Butt dragging
    legs . Simply put, the animal’s anus itches terribly, and she doesn’t have fingers to scratch it. The itching is caused by worms, so your ca...
  • The carnivore ancestors
    Presumably the dinosaurs died out around 65 million years ago (give or take a year), and the age of the mammals began. The earliest mammals ...
  • That satisfying crunching sound
    If you’ve ever heard a cat chowing down on dry food, you would assume they are enjoying it, and with good reason, because the crunchy qualit...

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  • Cats with Humans
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  • How They Behave and Why
  • In Books Music and Art
  • Keeping Them Healthy and Safe
  • lainnya
  • Mating and Motherhood . . . and “Fixing”
  • Notable Cat People and Their Opinions
  • The Amazing Feline Body
  • Wild Ancestors and Wild Cousins

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Entri Populer

  • Cardinal Richelieu
    Armand Jean du Plessis (1585–1642) is better known as Cardinal Richelieu, the chief minister of France’s King Louis XIII and just as autocra...
  • Stud jowls
    Just as old male orangutans develop distinctive fleshy cheek patches, older tomcats—unneutered toms—develop “stud jowls,” a widening at the ...
  • The dreaded hairball!
    digestive tract. Some cats never get them (my own hasn’t—knock on wood); some cats get them rarely and vomit them up with no harm to them...
  • “Cat on its brain”
    Here’s an old British weather tidbit: “Cat on its brain, it’s going to rain.” This expression refers to a cat’s nap pose: curled up so the t...
  • Tabby, the “default” setting
    If domestic cats were left to breed on their own, with zero interference from humans, there would be very few longhaired cats and very few s...
  • The infamous saber-tooths
    house cats, but in some way the ferocious saber-tooth cats are among the ancestors of today’s pets (or, at any rate, of cats in general). T...
  • Love bites
    Cats, like most animals, have sex strictly for reproduction, and so it only takes place when the female is fully fertile. Part of the brief ...
  • Butt dragging
    legs . Simply put, the animal’s anus itches terribly, and she doesn’t have fingers to scratch it. The itching is caused by worms, so your ca...
  • The carnivore ancestors
    Presumably the dinosaurs died out around 65 million years ago (give or take a year), and the age of the mammals began. The earliest mammals ...
  • That satisfying crunching sound
    If you’ve ever heard a cat chowing down on dry food, you would assume they are enjoying it, and with good reason, because the crunchy qualit...

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