Clumping of a cat's fur on its back can be caused by various factors such as matting due to lack of grooming, skin conditions, or underlying health issues. It is important to regularly groom your cat and consult a veterinarian if the clumping persists to determine the underlying cause and appropriate treatment.
Clumping of a cat's fur on its back can be caused by various factors such as lack of grooming, matting, skin conditions, or underlying health issues. Regular grooming and addressing any potential health concerns can help prevent fur clumping.
most people dont pet back there. your hands have oils and makes the cats fur oily or damaged and sometimes a cats fur is jus dirty but its hard to get their back of their ears dirty.
All cats have fur. unless they are furless cats
Cats can get matted fur on their back due to a lack of grooming, excessive shedding, or underlying health issues. Mats can form when loose fur tangles and clumps together, especially in hard-to-reach areas like the back. Regular grooming and proper nutrition can help prevent matting in cats.
Cats' fur may not grow back in certain areas due to scar tissue or damage to the hair follicles, which can prevent new hair from growing.
This answer is sort of unknown because when cats are babies they don't have fur . But some cats don't grow fur.
Yes, along with all the other fur.
Yes, cats have melanin in their fur, which gives their fur its color.
None, but the fur stands on end in all breeds of cats
cats have fur(you spelt it fur wrong)not hair
the cats fur the cats fur
None, cats have fur. Cats are mammals. Mammals have fur, that's it. If you really thought cats had feathers, you obviously don't know you fur.