Females are called pussycat, or more correctly, queens.
hjku
Yes, I used to have two male cats, and they got along great, as long as there is not a female cat around or with you, they should be fine.
Female orange cats are rare because the gene for orange fur is located on the X chromosome, and in cats, the orange color is a sex-linked trait. This means that male cats only need one copy of the gene to be orange, while female cats need two copies. Therefore, female orange cats are less common than male orange cats.
Well, that depends.. Does your cats bum giggle when it walks? If it does then yes they do. yes they do have two bums
Yes, female orange cats are relatively rare compared to male orange cats. The gene for orange fur is carried on the X chromosome, so female cats need two copies of the gene to be orange, while male cats only need one. This makes female orange cats less common.
Yes, female orange cats are relatively rare compared to male orange cats. The gene for orange fur is carried on the X chromosome, so female cats need two copies of the gene to be orange, while male cats only need one. This makes female orange cats less common.
The only way two cats will mate is when the female is in heat. A female not in heat will make it clear to any intact male that approaches her that she is not interested.
The correct term for referring to a group of cats is 'clowder.' Interestingly, there are also two other valid ways to refer to a group of cats, other than just saying "group of cats" or "cats." Those other two terms are 'clutter' and 'glaring.' In addition to this, if one wants to refer to a group of wild cats, the correct terms are 'dowt' and 'destruction.' A male cat, when neutered, is called a "gib," when not, is called a "tom." Female cats are known as "molly." The word "cat" itself derives from the Old English "catt." Catt has its source in the Late Latin "catus," meaning: "domestic cat." This Late Latin word probably derives from an Afro-Asiatic word: "kaddîska," meaning "wild cat."
Yes. My two cats were in heat when they got fixed. The vet will charge you extra, though.
yes
First of all female cats aren't neutered they are spayed. The tom probably isn't neutered and all he smells are the two female cats inside.
Sort of. A Calico cat is almost always (99.9% of the time) going to be female. The reason is that the female has two X genes, one has to carry red and the other black to get the 3 color effect. For a male to be a calico, it has to have XXY and is normally sterile.