Understanding
Cats Behavior: Part 1
A cat has his own welcoming miaow which he will use only
for his owner. Other people, even companion cats, will hear a
different miaow as their greeting. The cat will then rub
against the owner's legs and may accompany this with a
chirruping noise of greeting. He may bounce on stiff front
legs, back slightly arched, with ears pricked up and tail held
high.
Cats rub like this because they
have scent glands around their chins and lips (and also anus),
and when they rub they transfer this scent onto whatever they
have touched, making the object or person smell more familiar.
An owner who has been outside for a time will have lost some of
his cat's scent, so the cat renews it.
When greeting a returned owner,
the cat may be in such a hurry to say 'hi' that he does not use
any of his scent glands, but simply rubs his side along the
owner's legs. By bouncing, the cat can reach higher, and he
would probably like his owner to come down to his level so that
faces can be rubbed together.
When you are on a cat's level and
he sniffs at your face and then rubs against you, sniff back,
do not blow. Expelling air in your cat's face is the same as
another cat hissing at it, and is seen as a very unfriendly
gesture. A cat's sense of smell is much more developed than
ours, and one of its uses is to identify other cats. With
practice, we can distinguish between different cats by smell
alone, too.
Cats living in one household
develop a scent which is different from that of a group living
in another household. And within their own household scent,
each cat has his own individual scent. Most cat owners could
probably identify their own cat just by sniffing at his
nose.
Each breed of cat probably has
his own scent, and it is possible that each color of cat may
smell different. Certain breeds and certain colors of cat
appear to get on better than do others. When cats greet each
other they sniff faces first, then rub along one another's
bodies and sniff at the base of the tail. From this, each can
tell if the other is a cat they know, if he has been close to
unfamiliar cats, where he has been, and what his sexual status
is.
Often cats from the same
household will hiss at a companion on his return from a visit
to the vet because of the unfamiliar smell which still attaches
to him. And if a human is invited to sniff back at a cat's
face, which could be considered an honor, the cat will probably
then turn his tail; this is also undoubtedly an invitation to
sniff.
Grooming by licking not only
settles the fur neatly and keeps it clean, it also gives it the
right smell. As several cats in one household usually eat the
same food, their saliva might be expected to smell similar, and
this could help mark the fur with a scent familiar to all.
Unfamiliar cats will be shown they are unwelcome by a range of
behavior and language, beginning with the hiss.
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