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Cat’s Behavior: Dominance, Sounds, Meows
The dominance of male cats is decided by the
following; the bigger, stronger and younger cat wins his place
in the hierarchy. He does not always have to fight to work
his way up the ladder, because older or weaker cats may submit
peacefully; nor does any one cat have to fight every other
cat in a group where the hierarchy has been well established.
As he matures, a strong young cat may become dominant to one
who was dominant to him previously, therefore working his way
up the ladder. At the same time, an aging cat will likewise
work his way down. In any group of feral cats, the most dominant
will be a male. Dominance in wild-living female cats is usually,
though not always, linked to the number of litters she has
produced; the more litters, the higher she stands in the hierarchy.
In the average group of house-cats, the balance of power may
well be different. Sometimes neutering can alter the hierarchy,
or in any household the most dominant cat may be a neutered
male or female. Where there is a mixture of neutered and entire
cats, the most dominant may still be the neuter cat; it may
be the one which has lived there the longest, or perhaps a
more assertive young cat.
Cats
can make over a hundred different sounds, from the pleasant
purr, to a wide variety of meows, to the fierce growl. They
create a range of sounds by passing air over their vocal chords,
varying the extent to which the mouth is open, and altering
the muscle tension in the throat and lips.
Every
owner will be able to distinguish between, and to understand,
various meows, which will be indistinguishable to another
person. House-cats converse much more than feral cats because
they have discovered that language is important to us. For
instance, most of us talk to our cats as we prepare their food,
telling them not to be impatient or greedy; if we open a door
to let them into the house, we say hi, or when we complain
about their wet feet on the carpet.
In
this way, cats associate language with action, and will then
train us to understand their language. A cat will meow
in a certain way and run to the door, which obviously means
“let me out.” When we go into the kitchen, a cat will give
a quite different meow sound which means “I am hungry.” The
owner is not the only one who can understand; if there are
other cats in the home which hears the “I am hungry” meow,
they will rush to the kitchen also in the hope of being fed.
Their own “I am hungry” meow may sound quite different to
the one they have responded to, but they understand it nevertheless,
just as we do. We soon learn to distinguish between the different
calls if we listen and watch our feline teachers. #
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SolveYourProblem.com
: 2008
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