Yes, pedigree cats can hunt just like non-pedigree cats. Hunting behavior is instinctual in cats, regardless of their breed or pedigree status. However, some pedigree cats may have been bred for specific traits that could affect their hunting abilities, such as physical characteristics that may hinder their agility or hunting skills. Overall, individual temperament and environment play a significant role in a cat's hunting capabilities, regardless of pedigree.
Pedigree Fish?
Pedigree cats are a result of many generations of breeding within the same breed. You cannot tell this by looking at a cat, only by recording the generations of cats. Technically a cat is not pedigree if you do not have a record of its family, even if it has been bred true, as you need proof of breed to enter it in a cat show as a pedigree.
Yes, cats hunt bugs as part of their natural behavior.
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.
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.
Yes, cats hunt bunnies as part of their natural behavior.
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.
There is no definite answer, since Domestic Shorthairs are non-pedigree cats that are shorthaired.
well of course cats hunt birds
You don't.