If your cat has free run outdoors and
eats wild rodents, have your veterinarian examine a stool sample for intestinal parasites every six months.
It's natural lifecycle is to move from cat to cat when
they eat wild rodents.
Not exact matches
In the
wild, cats
eat many small meals consisting of
rodents, birds, bugs, and other small creatures.
Feeding whole prey mimics the diet of small
wild cats, which typically
eat rodents, other small mammals, reptiles, and birds (Plantinga et al., 2011).
In the
wild, the food their ancestors
ate (
rodents, etc.) had a high enough water content that they didn't feel thirsty as often.
Think about what a cat in the
wild would
eat, such as birds, mice and other small
rodents, all of which are approximately 70 - percent water.
Before being domesticated thousands of years ago, ferrets in the
wild primarily
ate rodents and other fresh meat.