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Ontogeny of individuality in the domestic cat in the home environment

Ontogeny of individuality in the domestic cat in the home environment
Ontogeny of individuality in the domestic cat in the home environment
The behaviour of house cats Felis silvestris catus from nine litters was recorded at 4 months, 1 year and 2 years of age, in their home environment immediately after meals fed by their owners. We extracted by principal components analysis four elements of ‘behavioural style’ that were consistent from one age to another: based upon behaviour patterns that were most heavily loaded on each component, these were labelled as Staying Indoors, Rubbing, Investigative and Boldness elements. The Staying Indoors and Rubbing elements are similar to two aspects of behavioural style identified in a previous study of adult cats; the Boldness element, possibly coupled with the Investigative element, may be similar to the shy/bold continuum identified in controlled studies of cats and other species. Four-month-old male cats were the most likely to Stay Indoors; the Rubbing element increased with age in the majority of individuals, both male and female. Littermates tended to be similar to one another in Rubbing (at 4 months) and Boldness (up to 1 year). A positive effect of handling received during the first 8 weeks of life was detected for Boldness at 4 months of age.
behaviour, animals, humans, selection, evolution
0003-3472
231-237
Lowe, S.E.
f8606a55-5623-428b-8ff1-11bd2a8539a7
Bradshaw, J.W.S.
c23e8813-8e07-4916-b86f-e09919e8e6fb
Lowe, S.E.
f8606a55-5623-428b-8ff1-11bd2a8539a7
Bradshaw, J.W.S.
c23e8813-8e07-4916-b86f-e09919e8e6fb

Lowe, S.E. and Bradshaw, J.W.S. (2001) Ontogeny of individuality in the domestic cat in the home environment. Animal Behaviour, 61 (1), 231-237. (doi:10.1006/anbe.2000.1545).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The behaviour of house cats Felis silvestris catus from nine litters was recorded at 4 months, 1 year and 2 years of age, in their home environment immediately after meals fed by their owners. We extracted by principal components analysis four elements of ‘behavioural style’ that were consistent from one age to another: based upon behaviour patterns that were most heavily loaded on each component, these were labelled as Staying Indoors, Rubbing, Investigative and Boldness elements. The Staying Indoors and Rubbing elements are similar to two aspects of behavioural style identified in a previous study of adult cats; the Boldness element, possibly coupled with the Investigative element, may be similar to the shy/bold continuum identified in controlled studies of cats and other species. Four-month-old male cats were the most likely to Stay Indoors; the Rubbing element increased with age in the majority of individuals, both male and female. Littermates tended to be similar to one another in Rubbing (at 4 months) and Boldness (up to 1 year). A positive effect of handling received during the first 8 weeks of life was detected for Boldness at 4 months of age.

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More information

Submitted date: 2 May 2000
Published date: 1 January 2001
Keywords: behaviour, animals, humans, selection, evolution

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 55654
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/55654
ISSN: 0003-3472
PURE UUID: c98e41de-2ba9-432c-b63e-148ea73f34b8

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Date deposited: 04 Aug 2008
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 10:56

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Contributors

Author: S.E. Lowe
Author: J.W.S. Bradshaw

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