| | - The Veterinary Topics
Why are there so many cats? It has to do with their efficiency of reproduction. Next to rabbits, there are not any other domestic “furry” mammals that can bear so many offspring in such a short time. A free roaming domestic queen reproducing female c ... http://www.cathealth.com/Repro.htm
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- The Cats Protection
Puberty usually occurs around five to eight months in cats, although it can happen as early as four months and as late as 18 months depending on the breed of cats. Cats Protection recommends neutering both male and female cats from four months of age ... http://www.cats.org.uk/catcare/faq_neutering.asp
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- The Normal Birth
This is a time for her to do final preparations. She begins to feel the changes in hormones that signal impending birth and she gets restless, may pace or call, will enter her box to shift the material around, digging and pulling nesting behavior, an ... http://www.cathealth.com/birth.htm
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- The Getting Ready
The length of pregnancy in queens is about 6466 days, though there is a wide range around this time of what is still considered normal. During the first third of her pregnancy, she will not change much in appearance. In the last 13 of the pregnancy, ... http://www.cathealth.com/ready4kittensPREG.htm
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- The Feline Theriogenology
The Detailed information from the School of Veterinary Medicine at Louisiana State University on the reproduction of cats. ... http://www.vetmed.lsu.edu/eiltslotus/theriogenology-5361/feline%20index.htm
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