Unless you live in a country where cats are permitted to be sold as food, it is both cruel and illegal to hunt or harm domestic cats.
If they're in the wild, small or large mammals depending on what species they are. Feral cats scrounge in garbage, hunt what small mammals they can find, and eat what some humans will put out for them. Inside house cats usually eat the cat food that their human friends will feed them, though they may hunt a bit depending on the house but that's unusual nowadays. Outside and inside house cats will eat what their humans give them as well as hunt, usually.
Wild house cats (strays) will usually hunt to eat mice, birds, chipmunks, or any other small animals around the area.
Usually any cat food they are given, though some are finicky. If there are mice in the house they will hunt them, but may or may not eat them.
Yes, wild cats do hunt rabbits. On many occasions, a cat will hunt the baby rabbits for food.
Yes. They hunt wild cats, lynxes are killed for their fur in Spain.
Well, cats hunt at dark more often than day that is why they have night vision and sometimes they hunt at day..its sorda half half =]
Adaptations a cat has for getting food is the natural instinct to hunt. Wild cats and domestic cats are able to hunt for survival.
House cats eat dry and wet cat food that their owners give them. Some owners like to give the cats treats and ,if the owner loves to spoil their cat, leftover food from the households meals. Outdoor cats may hunt birds, bugs and small mammals (such as mice, rats, ect.) and lizards because the cat has natural instincts, whether they are hungry or not. Some cats may eat the hunted animal if hungry or leave the animal for later when the cat is hungry or not even eat it! Although indoor cats may be able to hunt animals that get inside of the house or if the cat sneaks outside.
well of course cats hunt birds
You don't.
Yes, many cats are house cats. You can count all adopted cats as house cats, since they belong to households.
Hunting is a predatorial instict deeply woven into a cat. In the wild, cats hunt to survive, never passing up the chance to catch somthing. So when a house cat sees a rodent or a bird, they are likely to get a great desire to pounce on it. But cats do not just hunt things to eat them; sometimes they use a killed bird as a toy.