Cat
Felis catus
The domestic cat (Felis catus) is a small carnivorous mammal descended from wildcats and shaped by thousands of years of life around human settlements. Cats are both companions and working animals, valued for social behavior, pest control, and a wide range of coat colors, patterns, body types, and pedigreed breeds. They retain strong hunting instincts, flexible bodies, retractile claws, sharp senses, and territorial habits. Even indoor cats express normal behavior through climbing, scratching, scent marking, play, grooming, and quiet resting places.
Responsible cat care includes appropriate food, clean water, litter management, vaccination, parasite control, dental care, identification, and routine veterinary attention. Spaying or neutering prevents many unwanted litters and can reduce some health and behavior problems. Indoor housing or supervised outdoor access protects cats from cars, predators, disease, and wildlife conflict, though it must be paired with enrichment and exercise. Breeders and adopters should consider temperament, inherited disease risk, socialization, and lifetime cost rather than choosing only for appearance. Colony management and rescue work also depend on accurate records and humane population control.