My cat strangely refuse to eat fish, fresh or cooked. Somehow it simply hates fish, but would gladly gobble down other animals it hunted (eg. bird, rats, mice). Due to hygiene purposes, and out of sympathy for the birds, I try to discourage its hunting activity by stuffing it with lots of commercial cat food. Now it looks like Garfield.
2006-08-13 14:09:52
·
answer #1
·
answered by Weilliam 2
·
0⤊
0⤋
Why are cat's such fierce fish-lovers?
It's an interesting question, considering that because of the cats' desert origins, they probably never even saw a fish.
Eighteenth-century naturalist Gilber White thought their love for fish went againt nature. He wrote about this subject in a Natural History of Delbourne: They have a " violent fondness of fish, which appears to be their most favorite food; yet nature seems to have planted in them an appetitie that, unassisted, they know not how to grafity."
Enter the human factor.
Indeed, it's very likely that we humans are responsible for introducing them to fish in the first place. Even today, except for snatching the odd golfish from an unguarded fish tank now and then, it's still rare that a cat will hunt for fish in the wild. (However, there is one fish-hunting feline that lives in India.)
The cats' permanent connection with fish seems to have started during World War II. At that time, when most foods were hard to come by and carefully rationed, fish was an easily acquired and relatively cheap source of protein. Pet manufacturers decided it would be a great substitue for expensive, hard-to-get meat.
No matter how much Kitty loves fish, she must eat read meat for good nutrition and total health. She's a carnivore, after all.
2006-08-11 19:30:30
·
answer #2
·
answered by Turtle 7
·
1⤊
0⤋
Our domestic house cats are all descendents of the African wild cat who inhabited the deserts of north Africa eating rodents, snakes or other small reptiles that inhabited that region. I think that is why many of our cats who otherwise are lean have their little tummy pouches. Like the camel with its hump, this was a place where fat could be stored if times were lean.
These creatures moved and adapted to life around the Mediterrean where catching salt -water fish close to the shore became a part of their diet. The Turkish angora is an example of that. Later they also could eat the fish leftovers from human fishing as they were following the same migration route as the first humans did.
Cats were only "domesticated" many thousands of year later as the Egyptian civilization developed. When humans started to farm grasses for grains to make bread the cats found a handy cafeteria of mice among the human grain fields.
Since cats were carnivores by evolution if fish was availble it was just as good a source of protein as the rodents and just as tasty to them as it is to us.
That is probably why tuna is not a good fish for the cat. They never had it in their millions of years of evolution. Tuna is a deep water fish and one of the largest of the ocean fish.
After becoming an familiar part of the human world , and too small to be a worthy source for human protein, they were much prized by sailors for ridding the ships of unwanted rodents and traveled with the ships to all parts of world where humans went. They never had to "swim" to have fish to eat.
2006-08-11 19:03:17
·
answer #3
·
answered by old cat lady 7
·
1⤊
0⤋
Cats know how to swim it is just they they choose not to and only swim if they feel like it. Cats are just like that. They do what they want to do when they feel like it. There are fish in ponds and even in streams. Haven't you ever tasted something for the first time and then you loved it??? They also like liver, and they have never butchered a cow. Think about the entire cat family and not just the domesticated ones, even though the domesticate cat carry the same traits.
2006-08-11 18:41:27
·
answer #4
·
answered by angelsforanimals 3
·
1⤊
0⤋
They can swim, its just that some dont like water. Watch the Discovery channel, tigers looooooove to bathe in water.
Plus not all fish come from the ocean. Some are from the lakes and rivers which are easier for wild cats to hunt in.
2006-08-11 17:37:16
·
answer #5
·
answered by M C 2
·
0⤊
0⤋
In some parts of the world, there has been a tradition of cats living on fishing boats, and this dates back hundreds and hundreds of years. In Thailand, China, and many other Asian/Southest Asian countries, cats live on fishing boats or on the shore near them, and the people often give them fish.
Cats like many kinds of meat; fish is a stereotypical favourite, but certainly not the only one. And I've had several cats that don't like fish at all.
2006-08-11 19:32:38
·
answer #6
·
answered by P-nuts and Hair-dos 7
·
1⤊
0⤋
Cat nutrition is many times larger in protein and has a lot less carbs and fillers so it likely tastes extra effective. Cat nutrition is likewise many times larger in fat and extra fat would not be a good component for a pregnant Chi. The Chi shoud be eating a suitable cost pup nutrition for optimal nutrition at the same time as pregnant. There might want to be no corn, no wheat, no soy and a named meat in meal style because the first element. She must have get entry to to a dry nutrition in any respect cases. Canidae, well-being, Merricks, Innova, chicken Soup, Blue Buffalo are a number of the added effective manufacturers. on the different hand, it is extremely risky for a cat to eat canines nutrition because canines nutrition does no longer have the further element taurine that cat's favor.
2016-11-29 23:17:48
·
answer #7
·
answered by ? 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
All cats CAN swim, and some love the water! Most cats who are hungry enough would venture into shallow water to catch a feed of fish.
2006-08-11 18:34:55
·
answer #8
·
answered by Anonymous
·
1⤊
0⤋
Cats were never originally made to eat fish. If you ever see a "wild" cat, they're main diet is rodents, birds, and bugs. Humans are the ones that introduced cats to fish. Little fluffy isn't about to jump into a river to catch a trout. lol
2006-08-11 18:16:20
·
answer #9
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
It is a misconception that cats can't swim - most just choose not to, like they choose so many other things.
We once had a cat that enjoyed getting in a raft boat that we had for our pool - he liked the ride.
I think big cats look better coming out of the water than their smaller counterparts. They do look pitiful when they are soaked.
2006-08-11 18:59:11
·
answer #10
·
answered by Isthisnametaken2 6
·
1⤊
0⤋