For starters, our pet felines’ personalities are linked to their color.
There’s the basic kind of facts that I learned, like Guinness Book of World Record-type things, that I really didn’t know. [For example], the oldest living cat, [now deceased], was 27 years old out here in Point Loma, California. (Watch a video on why cats are so secretive.)
But I learned that scientists think that cats respond better to women, because women have higher-pitched voices than men. These facts are in bold print on every other page in the book, and nearly all of them surprised me.
PHOTOGRAPH BY DAVID ROTHBARD, NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC YOUR SHOT
Definitely. The color of coat is linked to behavior. For example, tortoiseshell cats, torties, can be independent and they usually like just one person, and they can be pushy about what they want. Torties and calicos and Abyssinians all have strong documented links between their coat color and personalities. More anecdotal is the orange tabby, who is the poster child for the most gregarious. But personality really seems to go with coat color.
One of the biggest questions I get is why does my cat become a psychotic rocket and suddenly go from 0 to 60 and zoom around the living room. We don’t really know for sure, but indoor cats especially have a lot of pent-up energy that they can’t exercise, whereas wild cats have hunting, stalking, and waiting on edge to keep them busy. It’s an energy release. That’s really what it is. The other question is why is my cat not using the litter box correctly, which is, not to be funny, the number one question I get. (See National Geographic readers’ pictures of cats.)
They’re very, very similar. Domestic cats have only been around for half the time that dogs have, so you can see almost the same behavior among lions, tigers, and leopards that you do among domestic cats. That is, perhaps, one of the biggest draws of these animals—we can live harmoniously with them and still get to watch Mutual of Omaha every day. They’re still part wild. They haven’t gone to finishing school yet. (See “Our Most Stunning Pictures of Big Cats.”)
Look at the almost universal outrage over the death of Cecil the Lion this summer. People love cats. Cats, hands down, own the Internet. That’s the leverage that we have to try and stop some of the astonishingly bad practices towards the other cats on our planet.
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