indoor plants cats won't eat
indoor plants cats won't eat
Warming up before they kill humans in warmer temperatures is unlikely, says new study
Humans may be getting caught up in the warming trend, but the question remains - will all the cats eat one another?
The newly published research by psychologists at the University of Illinois at Chicago, found that cats will definitely prefer that humans spend more time indoors.
They said it should even come as a surprise that even the largest carnivores should be concerned.
A diet similar to that of mice and rats might indeed be beneficial, but in humans some would argue it will take a long time to find a home.
The paper, published online in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, provides the first evidence for these fears. It says that not only can cats become attracted to humans over and over again - like the "human" dogs that inhabit our urban jungles - but also by the smell of human feces and the scent of human urine.
Humans are more easily seduced, it says.
This is what makes humans attracted to cats in China -- what's more, they'll be more likely to want to be left alone at the local market, eat as many as they feel like cooking and to be able to make their own food in China or the neighbouring regions.
But because of the way we talk and the way we smell, humans may become increasingly hostile to cats.
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