Recent studies have focused on evaluating scratching behavior in cats. Beyond the need to sharpen claws and maintain the ability to extend and withdraw the claws for hunting and climbing, scientists have identified different social messages in scratching. Scratching may be a form of territorial marking for cats, leaving chemical signals released by plantar pad glands on surfaces.
The results show that the presence of FIS can influence and prime the location for this important feline behavior. It also gives specific, long lasting information to other cats. Using the semiochemical approach can modify the choice of areas selected spontaneously by cats. In the future, it could be used as a preventative measure for a cat arriving at a new home or control or change inappropriate scratching behavior. [VT]
See also:
Mengoli M, Mariti C, Cozzi A, et al. Scratching behaviour and its features: a questionnaire-based study in an Italian sample of domestic cats. Journal of Feline Medicine and Surgery 2013;15:886-892.
Related blog posts:
March 2014: Understanding scratching behavior in cats
More on cat health:
Winn Feline Foundation Library
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