A male cat usually reaches sexual maturity, and therefore be able to reproduce, at the age of about 6 months old, although some reach sexual maturity as early as 4 months.
Spraying is one sign that a cat is ready to mate. He will start to spray vertical surfaces to tell other cats that this is his territory, and to let any passing female cats know he is a willing and healthy mate.
However, it is not ideal to let a kitten breed. It is recommended to neuter kittens before the age of 6 months to eliminate the risk of breeding unwanted litters and possible health problems later on in the cat's life.
One of the biggest symptoms that a male cat has reached puberty is urine spraying. Another symptom of puberty for a male cat is howling because they are looking for female cats.
Nope
Yes. Cats require both a male cat and a female cat to reproduce.
No, they are in no way able to reproduce with each other.
No. Being able to reproduce is only one characteristic of a living organism. These characteristics include the ability to grow, reproduce, take in and use energy, excrete waste, respond to the environment.
There is no difference in how feral cats reproduce than in domesticated cats. Ferals just do not have a human (yet) to watch over them; that's the only difference between domesticated and feral cats.
yes. because the first male usaully only triggers her for ovulation ( the midst of a female to allow her to reproduce) the second male gets her pregnant. hope this helps, silver123
yes because they be will protective of there young if there pregnant or not they may think there pregnant and show same signs but may not be preg. if they were fixed they may still be mean to male cat
Actually, the term is spayed. This is where the cat gets "fixed" which also means it can not reproduce. The word spray would be in a male cat where he is letting out disgusting juice/pee from his genatles with a foul smell
A male cat is called a Tom cat.
A sterile cat is one that cannot produce offspring. It can be a female that has been spayed or a male that has been neutered. It can also be from disease or a deformity.
A male cat is usually referred to as a "Tom".
"Tom cat" is a term used for a male cat, usually the dominant male in a group. It is also used to refer to any stray or feral male cat.