The Domestic Cat: The Biology of Its Behaviour
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Average customer review:Product Description
Humans have lived with cats for thousands of years, and there are now more cats kept in western households than any other animal. Cherished as companions, valued as rodent catchers, their enigmatic behaviour has intrigued and bewildered us for generations. Whilst accepting the comforts of human homes, cats do seem to ‘walk by themselves’. Although loved for their independence and self-reliance, myths and fables surround them, leaving them open to persecution and misunderstanding. Covering all types of cats from pampered pets to feral hunters, this completely revised new edition of The Domestic Cat shows how cats live and behave in a variety of circumstances and surroundings. With new chapters on welfare issues, and cat-cat communication, this volume penetrates the enigma that is Felis catus, sorting fact from fiction, and helping both the general reader and the specialist in animal behaviour or veterinary science to understand what cats really are.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #112030 in Books
- Published on: 2000-06-08
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 256 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
From the reviews of the previous edition: ‘The Domestic Cat is sure to become a classic in the study of behaviour in domestic animals.’ Juliet Clutton-Brock, Nature
‘Cat society is wonderfully reported here … a fine example of behaviour study.’ Scientific American
‘… this book is an excellent resource in which to seek information, find references, build a background for any new studies involving cats … this edition provides one of the best sources available for comparison of behaviors across the field group.’ Penny Bernstein, Anthrozoös
‘This book will be of interest to many general readers but its greatest value will be to the growing number of workers in the field of companion animal behaviour, including those employed by animal welfare societies, to whom it will be an important work of reference as well as a source of reliable information.’ Jenny Remfrey, Animal Welfare
‘… well written, referenced and indexed … a must for anyone studying feline behaviour or involved in rehoming and rescue work … It is also a very useful reference text for veterinary surgeons and students with genuine interest in feline medicine.’ The Veterinary Record
Customer Reviews
'Some' biology, not 'the' biology
This is not the book implied by its title. It is not a chapter by chapter account of domestic cat behaviour, but the edited proceedings of a symposium of cat behaviour specialists. These are accessible to lay people, but some papers are too full of statistics to be of interest to the average cat fanatic, and others which (a bit like some human sociological research) make you think, 'But it didn't need research to tell me that!' And as the editors say in their introduction, 'This second edition covers more, but not all, aspects of domestic cat behaviour and ecology'. As someone who bought the book in the hope of a full and detailed guide, I find myself therefore a little disappointed.




