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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Stress in owned cats: behavioural changes and welfare implications.

Journal:
Journal of feline medicine and surgery
Year:
2016
Authors:
Amat, Marta et al.
Affiliation:
School of Veterinary Science · Spain
Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

Cats can experience stress from various sources, which can negatively affect their well-being and lead to changes in their behavior. Common stressors include changes in their surroundings, conflicts with other cats, poor relationships with humans, and not being able to engage in activities they enjoy. Stress can cause cats to eat less, which might lead to serious health issues, and it can also increase the chances of behaviors like marking territory with urine or showing aggression. In some cases, cats may develop compulsive behaviors, such as excessive grooming, due to stress. To help reduce stress in cats, it's important to create a stimulating environment, manage introductions to new cats carefully, and consider using synthetic pheromones that mimic the calming scents cats naturally produce.

Abstract

Domestic cats are exposed to a variety of stressful stimuli, which may have a negative effect on the cats' welfare and trigger a number of behavioural changes. Some of the stressors most commonly encountered by cats include changes in environment, inter-cat conflict, a poor human-cat relationship and the cat's inability to perform highly motivated behaviour patterns. Stress is very likely to reduce feed intake, and stress-related anorexia may contribute to the development of potentially serious medical conditions. Stress also increases the risk of cats showing urine marking and some forms of aggression, including redirected aggression. A number of compulsive disorders such as over-grooming may also develop as a consequence of stressful environments. Some of the main strategies to prevent or reduce stress-related behavioural problems in cats are environmental enrichment, appropriate management techniques to introduce unfamiliar cats to each other and the use of the synthetic analogue of the feline facial pheromone. As the stress response in cats depends, to a large extent, on the temperament of the animal, breeding and husbandry strategies that contribute to the cat developing a well-balanced temperament are also very useful.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26101238/