Here are 25 interesting and unusual facts about cats in nature, with scientific information in a humorous and easy-to-understand style.
1.
There are three main types of cats: big cats (such as lions and tigers) small cats (such as lynx and bobcat ), and domestic cats. But it is not necessary that according to quantity, as nouns imply. Some small cats are smaller than a cathouse and some small cats are as big as a big cat. The evolution of small cats occurred at the end of the last ice age 12,000 years ago. The modern domestic cat was created approximately 4,000 years ago in Egypt by human domesticated and domesticated wild cats. This domestication provided the Egyptians with an efficient natural mechanism for controlling rat and rat infestations.
2.
Cats leave their signature by using scent glands on their forehead, jaws, feet, and tail. Thus cats communicate in the absence of physical contact. They receive the boundaries of the fields, they know the goods, and they also mark the owners. Cats clearly value themselves as their owners or handlers.
3.
Friendly cats sniff each other’s glands around the head and mouth. then the odors can mix with each other by friction. But cats don’t need to learn the social rules of the pack to hunt. Their groups are less cohesive and are mainly concerned with breeding and raising puppies.
4.
Puppies are born blind and deaf. These sensations occur four fourteen days after birth.
5.
In the first days of life the cubs only sleep and nurse. Claiming his teat” against any struggle from the litter-mate” the pup will push with his forelegs on either side of the teat. This, of course, stimulates milk flow. The activity is mimicked in adulthood as an adult cat purifies its content in furry areas.
6.
At six weeks of age, cats begin playful acts that imitate hunting behavior. They progress from posing to grooming, followed by chasing and dancing. At twelve weeks of age, cats have learned the art of hiding and attacking.
7.
A cat eyes looks forward to sharpen stereoscopic vision. Hence the utmost care in judging the distances of leaping and wandering.
VIII.
A cat best peripheral vision. But because the eyes do not move freely cat, it is necessary for the cat to turn its head and sometimes bring its body. objects in sharp focus. Cats look straight and see them as threatened. So it is best not to look directly into cat’s eyes. If the cat catches you doing this, it will slowly blink and then look at the area where the cat can only look peripherally.
VIII.
The layer of tissue in the cat’s eyes, called the “carpet of light”, again reflects light through the cat’s retina. This allows the trigger to see in one-sixth of the light required by humans.
10.
In addition to the upper eyelid and the lower eyelid, the cat has a “third eyelid”, which is called, located at the nostrils. When the cat is sick, there is a contraction of the fatty tissue around the nerve of the eye. As the eye retracts slightly into the nerve, the hawk is exposed, indicating cat disease.
11.
The upper hearing range for cats is 65 kilohertz. This allows the hearing of the prey’s tinny sound. This ranged frequency of hearing for a cat is two octaves higher than that of a human. A cat’s hearing is less sensitive at lower frequencies.
XII.
The headphones can be rotated 180 degrees independently of each other.
XIII
The cat has a keen sense of smell and a much larger olfactory brain area than is normal in animals of its size.
14
There is an olfactory organ in the palate of the cat’s mouth, Jacobson’s organ. It is a small pouch. The cat divides its mouth and raises its head to smell the sweetness.
15
Cats sense temperature by smell and rarely burn their nose or mouth. A cat avoids touching something until it feels it first.
16.
Even docile and well-fed cats will be hunted when given the opportunity. They will usually bring captured booty to their guards as a sort of reciprocal reward.
17
Let the cat rest for 16 hours a day. In blood the pressure of sleep is about forty and relaxation of the muscles. REM sleep occurs when about sixty percent.
18
Only domestic cats will hold their tails in the air while walking. wild cats walk with their tails down and between their legs. A straight or slightly twitching tail is a sign of tension. A tail that wags from side to side is a sign of trouble. If a standing cat does not move its tail straight down, it is a certain sign of an imminent attack.
XVIII
Cats have over 100 vocal cords. This compares one pair in humans. But cats will only make “meow” sounds at people and other non-cats. They communicate with other cats mainly by smell, with the occasional chatter of words consisting of various grunts and grunts.
20
Cats walk by moving both right feet and both left feet. Most quadrupedal mammals walk, moving forward, right, left, and rear, left and right behind. Giraffes and camels are the only other mammals that roam like cats.
XXI
An unusual walking pattern with a tail containing over 20 bones allows the cat to balance while walking on narrow surfaces.
22
The cat’s claw is not attached to other bones. This lack of function of the collarbone allows a normal cat to slide its body weight through holes no smaller than its head.
23
The cat’s nose has a rigid shape, unique to each cat like a human finger.
24
The woman begins the mating ritual with an evocative and calling scent. Then the player rolls before his potential mate or several partners who will fight over it. And when the copulation is finished, he moves to the attack of the sea, which will quickly fly away.
25
A male cat’s tail has a spike that allows it to remain attached to the female during intercourse. This is also the reason why the woman is a little uncomfortable and ready to beat the man. But it does not explain why it should return more. A female cat can easily produce 100 kittens in her lifetime with a little help from various male cats. The whole prodigious ritual of feline mating is perhaps another reason why the Egyptians elevated cats to a high status in worship.