they look after all of them
Most kittens are naturally curious. However, just like people, cats have different personalities. Some cats may be quieter than others. Give your kitten enough attention and playtime to bring out their confidence and personality. The rest will take care if itself.
It sounds like domination or battle for the fittest. If the cat is not the kittens mother this is natural. If the kitten is not protected by its mother the kitten is at risk to being killed until it grows older to protect itself. Obviously, the genetics of the mother wasn't fit enough to stay with and protect its offspring. Psychologically, your cat may see the kitten as a threat to its own existence when it grows older. Or maybe your cat was just hungry XD Addendum to above answer: It could also be that the kitten was sickly and posed a threat to the rest of the kittens. Sometimes mother cats will eat a sickly kitten who has died in order to protect the rest of the kittens from dying of the same illness.
take it to the vet and see if the kitten is alright. the vet will explain the rest Accept it as life ... we should nurture it the same as if it were normal ... the mother cat will most likely treat it with just as much compassion as it will for the rest of her litter. This is life!!
Absolutely!
Yes
Kittens sleep a lot because they are growing rapidly and need plenty of rest to develop properly. This is normal behavior for young cats and helps them conserve energy for play and exploration when they are awake.
Cats sit on their legs when they sleep, but they are not really sleeping. I guess they just don't want to lie down, but want to rest their eyes. Cats sleep 13-16 hours a day, but when they are twitching and mewing in their sleep, that is when they are really getting good rest. Growing cats need a lot of rest, to play, eat, sleep, use the litterbox and all the cat things kittens like to do.
Yes, though a lot of the time admittedly they do just lie down and rest, but, yes, they do sleep sometimes.
Jordan has a rather intriguing fetish for kitten fecal matter, so yes, but you may not see your kitten for the rest of your life.
A cat usually does not kill its prey by "ripping it open". Most cats use their long canine teeth to grab the prey by the neck. They then kill their prey by delivering a bite that severs the spinal cord. Once the prey is dead will they proceed to eat it.
No, not ussually anyway. Cats take nap after nap after nap to get their rest.
At 8 weeks of age, a kitten will still spend about half its time sleeping. Eat, play, sleep. Repeat. What a great life! So long as your kitten is eating regularly, using the litter box, and playing, do not be concerned that it sleeps for a large portion of its day - it's still growing, and all that play time wears it out!