because it is part of their hibabtit
wetlands
Some examples of cats that live on the forest floor include the bobcat, the lynx, and the jungle cat. These cats are well-adapted to hunting and navigating through dense forests and undergrowth.
Yes they can.
nothing
Servals do not live in the rainforest. They live on the African savanna, which is open grassland. Some small rainforest cats include ocelots, jaguarundi, and margays.
I'm not sure, but I would presume the shrub layer/forest floor as it is wettest part.
No, dogs cannot get lice from cats. Lice are species-specific parasites, meaning they are adapted to live on a specific type of host and cannot easily transfer between different species.
The fishing cat's partially-webbed toes make them good swimmers. Fishing cats eyes are close together and their head is also narrower then the normal cats because it needs to be able to dive head fist and grab their prey using their mouths. Fishing cats also have shorter legs and are about two times bigger then the average house cat.
The true big cats are tigers, lions, Jaguars, leopards, and snow leopards. Tigers live in woodlands, grasslands, and forests in Asia. Lions live in grasslands, scrublands, deserts, and open woodlands of Africa and northwest India. Leopards live in deserts, grasslands, woodlands, and forests in Asia and Africa. Jaguars live in wetlands and rainforests in Central America and South America. Snow leopards live at high elevations on mountains in Central Asia.
The fishing cat's partially-webbed toes make them good swimmers. Fishing cats eyes are close together and their head is also narrower then the normal cats because it needs to be able to dive head fist and grab their prey using their mouths. Fishing cats also have shorter legs and are about two times bigger then the average house cat.
No, cats do not live forever. Most cats live for about 15 years, although many live into their twenties.
they have very strong eyesight and balance