It depends. Parasites, like worms... yes. (nasty) But things like respiratory infections, no.
What you can do with your cat is that you can, play catch, pet her/him, play hide and go seek!!?
Yes, it is possible and likely that the cat would try to catch, kill and maybe eat the gerbil. You should keep the gerbil in a cage that isn't accessible by the cat.
He is both a pet cat, because you can pet it, and a stray cat because you can stray it. :)
You can keep the cat but get someone else to clean the litter tray.
My bad, I meant: How should you pet your cat?
No, it is inhumane and unethical. If that cat is someone's pet, you can get into legal trouble. If it's a stray, it's best to call the animal shelter to remove the cat. If it's your own pet, you need to seek psychiatric help.
Yes they can. My cat was just diagnosed with lymes and he is an indoor cat which I take outside sometimes on a leash. It started with him walking stiff like and now he is limping. Even if your cat is an indoor cat, it is worth testing your pet if they have any of the symptoms.
cats my pet mualed a cat lol cats my pet mualed a cat lol cats my pet mualed a cat lol cats my pet mualed a cat lol
it depends on the cat
furnosses is a rare disease that rodents are very likely to catch that is why you can go to your local pet store and give you rodent the vaccine for furnosses (humans can not catch this)
Yeah, keep it healthy. Rats don't "spread diseases" unless they have, or at least carry, those diseases. You're no more likely to catch a disease from a healthy, parasite-free rat than you are from a dog or cat.
Someone said it was the gold and white cat It's the barred owl