Jump to content

Catfight (animal behavior): Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
m rm unnecessary maint tags (howto & worldwide ??????)
not most animals
Line 5: Line 5:
:''This page deals with fights between [[cat]]s. For the [[slang]] meaning of the term, see [[catfight]].''
:''This page deals with fights between [[cat]]s. For the [[slang]] meaning of the term, see [[catfight]].''


A '''catfight''' is a physical clash between two [[cat]]s. Like most animals, cats will fight each other over [[Territory (animal)|territory]], mating rights and to defend their [[kitten|young]]. Kittens will also frequently playfight with one another as practice for later life. Catfights consist mainly of grappling combined with powerful slaps to the face and body.
A '''catfight''' is a physical clash between two [[cat]]s. Cats will fight each other over [[Territory (animal)|territory]], mating rights and to defend their [[kitten|young]]. Kittens will also frequently playfight with one another as practice for later life. Catfights consist mainly of grappling combined with powerful slaps to the face and body.


Humans may find it difficult to distinguish between cats playing and a genuine fight; the most obvious indicators of a real fight are that one or more of the cats is screaming and/or continuously hissing, one cat is overly dominant (in a playfight the cats will usually switch roles), and either cat receiving actual physical damage; though even in real catfights, cats rarely do more damage to each other than a few scratches. The best way for a human to stop a catfight is by distraction, such as making a loud noise or dropping something; attempting to physically separate the cats will usually cause them to turn their aggression towards the interfering human.
Humans may find it difficult to distinguish between cats playing and a genuine fight; the most obvious indicators of a real fight are that one or more of the cats is screaming and/or continuously hissing, one cat is overly dominant (in a playfight the cats will usually switch roles), and either cat receiving actual physical damage; though even in real catfights, cats rarely do more damage to each other than a few scratches. The best way for a human to stop a catfight is by distraction, such as making a loud noise or dropping something; attempting to physically separate the cats will usually cause them to turn their aggression towards the interfering human.

Revision as of 22:11, 9 May 2009

Two cats playing
A "play" cat fight between two house cats
This page deals with fights between cats. For the slang meaning of the term, see catfight.

A catfight is a physical clash between two cats. Cats will fight each other over territory, mating rights and to defend their young. Kittens will also frequently playfight with one another as practice for later life. Catfights consist mainly of grappling combined with powerful slaps to the face and body.

Humans may find it difficult to distinguish between cats playing and a genuine fight; the most obvious indicators of a real fight are that one or more of the cats is screaming and/or continuously hissing, one cat is overly dominant (in a playfight the cats will usually switch roles), and either cat receiving actual physical damage; though even in real catfights, cats rarely do more damage to each other than a few scratches. The best way for a human to stop a catfight is by distraction, such as making a loud noise or dropping something; attempting to physically separate the cats will usually cause them to turn their aggression towards the interfering human.