Do cats experience grief? New research suggests they might
Category: Pets & Animals
Via: hallux • 4 months ago • 10 commentsBy: Joe Hernandez - NPR
If a human or another animal close to them dies, does a cat grieve the loss?
That was the question a team of researchers from Oakland University in Michigan set out to answer when they surveyed hundreds of cat owners about their cat’s behavior after another cat or dog in the household passed away.
The data showed that cats exhibited behaviors associated with grief — such as eating and playing less — more often after the death of a fellow pet, suggesting they may in fact have been in mourning.
“It made me a little more optimistic that they are forming attachments with each other,” said Jennifer Vonk, a professor of psychology at Oakland University, who co-authored the study, published in the journal Applied Animal Behaviour Science .
“It’s not that I want the cats to be sad,” Vonk went on, “[but] there is a part of us, I think, as humans that wants to think that if something happens to us our pets would miss us.”
Though animals from elephants to horses to dogs have been shown to express signs of grief, less is known about the emotional life of the domesticated house cat. Vonk said she knew of only one other study on grief in domestic cats.
For their research, Vonk and her coauthor, Brittany Greene, surveyed 412 cat caregivers about how their feline companion acted after another pet in the house died.
They found that, after the death of a fellow pet, cats on average sought more attention from their owners, spent more time alone, appeared to look for the deceased animal, ate less and slept more.
Vonk said they didn’t observe “huge changes,” but the behavior changes they did see mirrored those that had previously been observed in dogs, which have evolved in a more social way than cats.
“For me, the most compelling finding is that when cats were reported to change their behavior in ways that would be consistent with what we would expect for grief,” Vonk said, “it’s predicted by things like the length of time that the animals lived together or the amount of time that they had spent together engaged in various activities or the quality of their relationships.”
Vonk acknowledged that there are some caveats to the research. An owner may have been projecting their own feelings of sadness on their surviving cat when reporting their symptoms, or the cat may have been trying to console the grief-stricken human. (Cat owners who felt more grief themselves reported more grief in their surviving cats, researchers found.)
The cat subjects may also have been behaving differently in response to a new household dynamic with one fewer pet, she added.
The researchers said more studies in this area would be necessary before drawing any conclusions. But Vonk, a cat owner herself, said her and Greene’s data suggest that cats may experience emotions akin to grief and sadness in ways that weren’t previously known.
“It does make me think maybe it’s more likely than I thought before that cats do have those feelings,” she said.
You are allowed to unabashedly lie about your beastie. Have at it!
When anthropomorphism is directed towards humans, it gives cats an unrealistic model for those humans to live up to.
When we return from being out of town our cat will be glued to us for the next few days. I imagine she grieves while we are away. She is spoiled as fuck.
My cat does the same thing. And she cries and cries for several days after I return home. I do think she suffers from separation anxiety. We have the boys next door come over to make sure she's fed and has water, and since she's gotten to know them she will allow them to pet her. I'm going to tell the next time how to make her their best friend (kitty crack)
We have the neighbor come over a couple times a day to give her the freshly cubed chicken breast in the fridge. Spoiled AF.
I'd say. I thought my cat was spoiled
A couple or so years ago, my Tasha passed away. She and Stubby had been housemates for almost 17 years. He grieved. He looked for her and while he was always a bit demanding on my attention, he stuck to me like glue. And, almost to the year she passed, he walked away into the woods and never returned. He wanted to be alone when he died and that really upset me
Animals can experience fear - ever see a cat that's scared. its fur standing up straight? If they experience fear, why can't they experience other emotions as well?
It's a defense mechanism to make them appear larger. Pufferfish do the same.
Morning..I have no doubt cats grieve..when my first Collie passed I got my cat at the time Tinka and placed her beside Bonnie to let her know she had gone..
Tinka crept up sniffed her face gave a lick on Bonnie's nose, her tailed fluffed out and she shot up the passage and hid under my bed..
For weeks Tinka would go out in the yard and just sit and look, she was still looking for her best friend..this went on for a good six months...
When my next Collie Shona passed my current cat Mishka fretted and stopped eating and attacked herself by pulling her fur out..was during the peak of covid and I was tracking back and forth to Melbourne for myeloma treatment..took her to the vet and everything was normal after tests etc and even the vet said she could only put it down to grieving and stress..
Do dogs and cats grieve?? absolutely and I have no doubt in my mind at all..they always break your heart when they go and it is no different in their animal world...
shona - good example for those who don't understand.
If possible, read the comments to the video.
Real life folks - real life.