The domestic cat (Latin: Felis catus) or the feral cat
(Latin: Felis silvestris catus) is a small, typically furry, carnivorous
mammal. They are often called house cats when kept as indoor pets or simply
cats when there is no need to distinguish them from other felids and felines.
Cats are often valued by humans for companionship and for their ability to hunt
vermin. There are more than 70 cat breeds; different associations proclaim
different numbers according to their standards.
Cats are similar in anatomy to the other felids, with
a strong, flexible body, quick reflexes, sharp retractable claws, and teeth
adapted to killing small prey. Cat senses fit a crepuscular and predatory
ecological niche. Cats can hear sounds too faint or too high in frequency for human
ears, such as those made by mice and other small animals. They can see in near
darkness. Like most other mammals, cats have poorer color vision and a better
sense of smell than humans. Cats, despite being solitary hunters, are a social
species and cat communication includes the use of a variety of vocalizations
(mewing, purring, trilling, hissing, growling, and grunting), as well as cat
pheromones and types of cat-specific body language.
Cats have a high breeding rate. Under controlled
breeding, they can be bred and shown as registered pedigree pets, a hobby known
as cat fancy. Failure to control the breeding of pet cats by neutering and the
abandonment of former household pets has resulted in large numbers of feral
cats worldwide, requiring population control. In certain areas outside the cats
native range, this has contributed, along with habitat destruction and other
factors, to the extinction of many bird species. Cats have been known to
extirpate a bird species within specific regions and may have contributed to
the extinction of isolated island populations. Cats are thought to be
primarily, though not solely, responsible for the extinction of 33 species of
birds, and the presence of feral and free ranging cats makes some locations
unsuitable for attempted species reintroduction in otherwise suitable
locations.
Since cats were venerated in ancient Egypt, they were
commonly believed to have been domesticated there, but there may have been
instances of domestication as early as the Neolithic from around 9,500 years
ago (7,500 BC). A genetic study in 2007 concluded that domestic cats are
descended from Near Eastern wildcats, having diverged around 8,000 BC in West
Asia. A 2016 study found that leopard cats were undergoing domestication
independently in China around 5,500 BC, though this line of partially
domesticated cats leaves no trace in the domesticated populations of today.
As of a
2007 study, cats are the second most popular pet in the United States by number
of pets owned, behind freshwater fish.
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