Close X
Sunday, December 29, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

How solitary cats find mates

Darpan News Desk IANS, 11 Nov, 2014 09:29 AM
  • How solitary cats find mates
Cats rely less on smell to hunt than dogs but they have genes related to an alternate form of smell that help them find mates, an analysis of the cat genome reveals.
 
These genes help our feline friends detect chemicals called pheromones which allow them to monitor their social environment, including seeking out the opposite sex, the findings showed.
 
“This ability is not as important to dogs, which tend to travel in packs. But it is crucial in cats, which are more solitary and may have more difficulty finding mates,” the researchers noted.
 
Although cats and humans have shared the same households for at least 9,000 years, they are more solitary than dogs.
 
"Cats, unlike dogs, are really only semi-domesticated," said senior author Wes Warren, associate professor of genetics at Washington University.
 
"They only recently split off from wild cats, and some even still breed with their wild relatives,” Warren added.
 
The researchers compared the genomes of domestic cats and wild cats, finding specific regions of the domestic cat genome that differed significantly.
 
The scientists found changes in the domestic cat's genes that other studies have shown are involved in behaviours such as memory, fear and reward-seeking.
 
These types of behaviours -- particularly those when an animal seeks a reward -- generally are thought to be important in the domestication process.
 
Cats also have better hearing than most other carnivores, including an ability to hear in the ultrasonic range to better track prey. Their vision is also exceptional in low light.
 
"Cats tend to be more active at dawn and dusk so they need to be able to detect movement in low light," said the study's first author Michael Montague from Washington University.
 
The study appeared in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Early Edition.

MORE Interesting ARTICLES

Exhausted doctors prescribe more antibiotics in evenings: Study

Exhausted doctors prescribe more antibiotics in evenings: Study
Exhausted by morning and afternoon clinic sessions, physicians are more likely to prescribe antibiotics for respiratory infections later in the day, says a study....

Exhausted doctors prescribe more antibiotics in evenings: Study

Kids understand familiar voices better

Kids understand familiar voices better
"This study shows that children were able to integrate knowledge of what a person sounds like and use this to their advantage," said study author Susannah...

Kids understand familiar voices better

Post a 'sick selfie' to get office leave!

Post a 'sick selfie' to get office leave!
"Showing off a hangover and to prove illness to friends or co-workers emerged as the most common reasons for uploading a...

Post a 'sick selfie' to get office leave!

Break-ups can shoo away your Twitter followers

Break-ups can shoo away your Twitter followers
They tracked these users from November 2013 to April 2014, filtered the data and arrived at a group of 661 pairs, who had been in...

Break-ups can shoo away your Twitter followers

Miracles Do Happen: Man presumed dead is alive

Miracles Do Happen: Man presumed dead is alive
In a rare incident, a man presumed killed by Ebola in Liberia regained consciousness when he was lifted into a body bag by a burial team, it was reported Sunday....

Miracles Do Happen: Man presumed dead is alive

In pain? You are likelier to spot pain-related words more often

In pain? You are likelier to spot pain-related words more often
If you are suffering from chronic pain, there are chances that you would pay more attention to words like ache, agony, distress and pain than to non-pain...

In pain? You are likelier to spot pain-related words more often