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Feline behavior problem
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The
natural lifestyle of the cat is characterized by low population density,
regular scheduling of
activities, infrequent interaction
between adult cats, defined territories, and a dominance
hierarchy with only one
reproductively-active male in each society. Obviously, many
households depart from some
or even all of these conditions, thus causing a wide range of
social-stress symptoms.
The signs will depend on the individual cat and situation and may
include house soiling, aggression,
withdrawal, household destruction, and changes in eating
and grooming habits. Such
responses are considered behavior problems by owners. |
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Soiling |
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Failure
to use the litter box, or house soiling, is the most common behavior problem
of cats. It
may be litter aversion,
a scent-marking activity, or a medical problem. Feline lower urinary
tract disease (FLUTD)-formerly
known as feline urologic syndrome (FUS)-accounts for a
significant number of house-soiling
cases. Signs of FLUTD include inappropriate urination and
passing of bloody urine.
Litter box aversion results from association with painful urination or
an urgency to urinate. FLUTD
can be a life- threatening problem and medical treatment from
a veterinarian should be
obtained.
Scent marking or spraying
is performed as the cat stands facing away from its target, quivering
its tail. The target is
usually a vertical object such as a window, cabinet or stereo. Uncastrated
males mark their territories
by urine spraying. Unspayed females may spray when they are in
heat. Neutering will solve
most spraying problems. However, cats of either sex may spray if
there are too many cats
in the household. If reducing the number of cats in the household is
not possible, treatment
with a psycho- active medication may be necessary. Inappropriate
defecation or nonspraying
urination may have the same motivations.
In contrast to spraying,
urination or defecation is performed in a squatting position. The house
soiling cat usually chooses
rugs, bathtubs, beds, basement floors or other horizontal surfaces.
Solving the problem begins
with analyzing the location of the elimination. Elimination near the
box indicates the litter
or box is rejected, whereas elimination elsewhere is probably a
preference for the location
or substrate. Stress, especially caused by additional animals or
people in the household,
causes some cats to become more fastidious about their litter. They
will also do the same if
their litter box is cleaned too infrequently. A first step might be cleaning
litter boxes daily instead
of weekly. Changing brands of litter, too little litter in the box,
overuse of deodorizers,
or a poor box location can also lead to house soiling. More boxes,
larger boxes, fine-grained
clumping litter, and frequent cleaning solve most soiling problems. |
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Aggression |
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Feline
aggression directed towards people is either predatory/playful or irritable.
Stalking and
pouncing on a person's feet
or ankles is typical of predatory aggression. If the cat is young,
the aggression is probably
play oriented. In these cases, the bite is usually inhibited. However,
if the owner has not corrected
the cat for playing too roughly, it may not have learned to
inhibit its bite. Playful
aggression is best redirected towards swinging toys. Irritable aggression
usually occurs when the
cat is being stroked too roughly or excessively. Petting the cat more
gently and for shorter times
should resolve this problem.
Redirected aggression occurs
when a cat sees another cat but cannot reach it and attacks the
owner or another cat in
the household instead. To treat redirected aggression, remove the cat
to a quiet dark room and
isolate him until he is calm. Don't try to handle the cat-push it with
a
cardboard shield to maneuver
it into a quiet room. Try to prevent visual contact with strange
cats-the usual cause of
redirected aggression.
Aggression among cats in
the same household is the most common feline aggression problem.
Introduction of a new adult
cat will usually provoke aggression. However, aggression can also
occur between cats that
had lived peacefully together for years. Redirected aggression is a
frequent cause. Sometimes
a physical change, or a change in odor can precipitate an attack.
Gradual reintroduction of
the cat, with or without psychotropic medications, is necessary. |
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Clawing and Scratching |
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Clawing
or scratching behavior is a grooming behavior that loosens old layers of
the claw. It
may also be a form of marking
behavior. Whatever the motivation for scratching, it is often an
undesirable behavior especially
if the new sofa or draperies become a scratching site.
Scratching habits can be
prevented from developing. If kittens are encouraged to use a
scratching post, they usually
will not abuse furniture. A good scratching post should have
loosely woven material to
allow the cat to hook its claws in the fabric. Hemp is a preferred
scratching material. Cats
scratch more often when they awaken and when greeting a returning
owner. Therefore, locate
the post near the cat's usual sleeping place and the front door.
Carpeted climbing trees
also help. The best teacher of a kitten is its mother, so choose kittens
from queens that use a scratching
post. If destructive clawing persists, discuss other solutions
with your veterinarian such
as the application of vinyl nail caps, or as a last option surgical
procedures such as tendenectomy
or declawing. |
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Plant Eating |
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Cats
frequently eat grass. Therefore, it is not surprising that cats may eat
house plants. Plant
eating can have serious
consequences to the cat because many house plants are poisonous.
The best solution is to
provide green plants that are safe for cats to eat. Check local pet stores
to purchase safe edible
plants for your cat. The cat needs to learn to discriminate edible from
nonedible plants. A water
squirt gun is an effective aid in the discrimination process. Another
method is to spray the leaves
of the plant with a hot pepper solution. |
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Prevention |
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Preventing problems is often
the easiest approach. Several problems, such as house soiling
and aggression, occur more
frequently with intact male cats. Also, castrated males do not
roam nearly as far, thus
limiting their social contacts, fights, and contact with automobiles.
Females may be as protective
of an area as males. A neutered female will not attract
free-roaming males, and
there will be fewer fights in the backyard during the breeding season.
If you want to keep several
cats in your house, the ideal way is to raise them together as
kittens. It is not necessary
that they be littermates. An adult cat will be much more likely to
accept a kitten as a companion
than another adult. Also, an adult of the same sex is more
threatening than one of
the opposite sex.
Gradually introduce a new
cat to an established household. First, confine it to a room for the
first few days, then to
a cage in the doorway of the room. The resident cat(s) may investigate
for another few days before
allowing direct contact between the cats. The new cat should
continue to have a room
or cage to which it may retreat.
Resident cats which are especially
attached to people should receive extra attention during this
period. Some of the anxiety
may be alleviated by giving the cat an antianxiety medication.
However, if the resident
cat displays persistent aggression, house soiling, or withdrawal, it
might be advisable not to
keep the second cat. While two cats may become attached to one
another, there is no apparent
benefit to keeping many cats in one house. In fact, the stress
produced by overcrowding
may be detrimental to them. |
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Behavior Modification
Techniques |
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Realistically,
problems may be beyond the prevention stage, and need treatment. There
are
different methods that can
be used to help cats learn more acceptable behavior patterns. The
method chosen should be
appropriate for the problem you are trying to correct.
Aversion uses an obnoxious
stimulus (e. g. hot pepper sauce or strong perfume) to teach
avoidance. It is effective
for oral behavior problems such as wool sucking or plant eating.
Desensitization works well
for managing fear or anxiety. First expose the cat to nonfearful
stimuli and then gradually
increase the intensity of the stimuli over time. For extreme cases, the
use of antianxiety medications
are helpful in the initial desensitization process.
Punishment for misbehavior
is only effective when the cat is caught in the act. Cats are unable
to associate their actions
with punishment unless the two occur within minutes of one another.
Cats differ from other species
in the type of punishment that is most effective to change
behavior. The cat must not
associate the owner with the action, otherwise the cat learns to
avoid the behavior only
in the owner's presence. The most effective techniques are using a
water squirt gun or throwing
a rattle nearby. The cat does not associate these punishments
with the owner, but rather
with the location or their behavior.
Rewards are used for natural
behavior that resembles behavior ultimately desired. Rewards
may be in the form of food
treats or stroking the cat. |
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