When a female cat is trying to attract a male cat, she is 'in heat' and may be more friendly than usual, act strangely and meow loudly. She also lets off a scent that tells male cats to come to her.
It truly depends on the age of the cats, and where they have lived.
For older cats where one has lived in your house for a long time, you must introduce the other slowly. Often it is easier introducing males to females, but you cannot count on this; leave the new one locked in a room with all the things it needs for a while, then start leaving the door open in for a little while each day, and gradually keep it open longer, so that the cats interact more and more, getting to know each other slowly.
For younger cats (kittens, mainly) that are bought at the same time usually get along just fine, and grow up together happily.
For older cats that you buy at the same time, sometimes they will not get along at first, and, if they don't, try locking them both in separate rooms and do the same things as if they were brought in separately.
You can't....just get a male and a female and it's their choice whether they breed or not.
Actually the female attracts the male.
If your female cat is fixed aund another male cat is not fixed your female cat should not be attracted to the male cat but the male cat could be attracted to your female cat. ;)
They call a male cat a 'Tom', and a female a 'queen'.
Male cats are neutered and female cats are spayed.
A cat can be male or female A female cat is known as a she cat. A male cat is known as a tom cat.
Female cats get spayed. Male cats get neutered. It's the smart thing to do.
I have had a male cat and a female cat and male cat slept significantly longer than the female. So,yes it does.
You can determine if a tabby cat is male or female by its color. Ginger tabby cats tend to be male while tortoiseshell tabby cats are female.
Yes. Cats require both a male cat and a female cat to reproduce.
Yes cats have an alpha structure. Depending on weather the cat is female or male and if the female cat is sprayed and the male is neutered. Making the female have a larger territory when it coming from the kittens.
yes it's a territory thing!Another AnswerHow much a cat urinates depends on what it is fed, and how much water it drinks. Gender has no factor.An intact (not neutered) male cat will spray as many surfaces as possible to mark out territory and to attract a female. Unspayed female cats do this also to some extent. Neutered cats, female or male, do not urinate more than the other.
a male cat is called a Tom and a female cat is called a Queen
Male cats doe not generally bit female cats for killing prey. They may attempt to steal their food if they are not associated with the other cat through a prior relationship.