The Sunday Telegraph

Look what the cat brought in – but it’s not a gift for you

- By Joe Pinkstone

CAT owners have long convinced themselves that the dead mouse their pet has dragged in is a gift.

But scientists at the University of Lincoln have put a cat among the pigeons with research dispelling this myth.

“It is about small-animal security,” authors Prof Dan Mills, an animal behaviour expert, and Celia Haddon explain in Being Your Cat.

“Apart from bringing in prey for kittens, [cats] do not share food or give food as presents.

“The reason [cats] bring prey into the house is that it is a safe place where [they] may bring new resources to play with or consume later on.”

Extroverte­d cats are much more likely to bring a meal into the home, Prof Mills and Ms Haddon state.

“It is actually a sign of confidence,” they write. “[Cats] bring prey to your safe place, without fear that some large animal will pounce, where [they] can relax and do what [they] want with [their] prey, which might include just ignoring it.”

Scientists have long tried to dissuade cats from bringing their kills home, with cats blamed for shrinking native wildlife population­s around their homes.

A study published last year estimated that UK cats kill between 160 and 270 million animals annually, with birds accounting for a quarter.

Methods which could reduce hunting include feeding them a high-meat diet, ensuring they spend 10 minutes a day playing with moving objects and putting bells on collars.

Experts have urged owners to keep cats inside at dusk and night time to avoid them killing bats and other animals. A curfew has been implemente­d in some parts of Australia.

Dr Maren Huck, senior lecturer in animal behavioura­l ecology at the University of Derby, said she has been looking at why cats bring dead animals home since 2014 when her own pet, Treacle, surprised her with a dead merlin. The falcon, the UK’s smallest bird of prey, is as big as an average cat.

Her work involved attaching cameras to cats to reveal what they get up to outside. “Cats are seen as relatively lazy, especially compared to dogs. But we saw that when they were outside, they became super alert,” she said.

“Owners who have particular­ly active predatory cats might consider what they could do to reduce their cat’s hunting activity.

The evidence for bells on collars has been somewhat mixed. Other options such as bibs can be effective, but these can impede the movement of cats.

 ?? ?? Cats will bring prey into the house either for kittens or to deal with later at their leisure
Cats will bring prey into the house either for kittens or to deal with later at their leisure

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