How hungry cats get the food bowl filled
Purrs of famished felines resemble pitch of a baby's cry, study suggests
Slideshow |
Animal Tracks A dog in dreads, two finicky sea turtles, a chilled-out chimp and monkeys and meerkats with pumpkins – find all that and more photos of creatures great and small. more photos |
Pet health videos |
Hotel in Taiwan pampers pooches Nov. 3: A hotel in Taiwan gives dog owners a break by catering to man's best friend with a salon, pool, recreation rooms and field trips for pooches. Msnbc.com's Dara Brown has the story. |
Most popular |
| |||||
A cat's purr normally says, "I'm happy." But a new study suggests some purrs send cat owners a much different message: "Feed me!"
Researchers found that purrs of hungry cats included a higher-pitched sound, somewhat like a cry or meow. They played recordings of these purrs from 10 cats to 50 human volunteers. Even people who'd never owned a cat found them to be more urgent and less pleasant than contented purrs from the same animals.
These food-seeking purrs may exploit the way humans naturally respond to a baby's cry, the researchers suggest. Not all cats use this strategy, but some apparently learn to turn it on when they see it's effective in getting a human to feed them, Karen McComb of the University of Sussex in England said in a statement.
She and co-authors present their work in Tuesday's issue of the journal Current Biology.
- Discuss Story On Newsvine
-
Rate Story:
View popularLowHigh - Instant Message
MORE FROM PET HEALTH |
| Add Pet health headlines to your news reader: |
Resource guide


