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The cat is a domestic species of small carnivorous mammal.
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- This also provides sure footing for hind paws when navigating rough terrain.
- It registers directly by placing each hind paw close to the track of the corresponding fore paw, minimizing noise and visible tracks.
- Unlike most mammals, it uses a "pacing" gait and moves both legs on one side of the body before the legs on the other side.
- It walks on the toes, with the bones of the feet making up the lower part of the visible leg.
- The cat is digitigrade.
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- Polydactylous cats occur along North America's northeast coast and in Great Britain.
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- Some cat breeds are prone to having extra digits ("polydactyly").
- This special feature of the front paws on the inside of the wrists has no function in normal walking but is thought to be an antiskidding device used while jumping.
- More proximally is a protrusion which appears to be a sixth "finger".
- The dewclaw is proximal to the other claws.
- Most cats have five claws on their front paws and four on their rear paws.
- or for extra traction on soft surfaces. Cats shed the outside layer of their claw sheaths when scratching rough surfaces.
- They may extend their claws in hunting or self-defense, climbing, kneading,
- Cats can voluntarily extend their claws on one or more paws.
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- The claws on the forefeet are typically sharper than those on the hindfeet.
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- This keeps the claws sharp by preventing wear from contact with the ground and allows for the silent stalking of prey.
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- In their normal, relaxed position, the claws are sheathed with the skin and fur around the paw's toe pads.
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- Cats have protractible and retractable claws.
- Nonetheless, they are subject to occasional tooth loss and infection.
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- less retention of food particles between teeth, and a diet mostly devoid of sugar.
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- Cats tend to have better teeth than most humans, with decay generally less likely because of a thicker protective layer of enamel, a less damaging saliva,
- These are vital in feeding, since cats' small molars cannot chew food effectively, and cats are largely incapable of mastication.
- which efficiently shears meat into small pieces, like a pair of scissors.
- The premolar and first molar together compose the carnassial pair on each side of the mouth,
- which have small vertebrae.
- which is an adaptation to their preferred prey of small rodents,
- Compared to other felines, domestic cats have narrowly spaced canine teeth relative to the size of their jaw,
- causing irreversible paralysis and death.
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- inserting them between two of the prey's vertebrae and severing its spinal cord,
- When it overpowers its prey, a cat delivers a lethal neck bite with its two long canine teeth,
- Within the jaw, cats have teeth adapted for killing prey and tearing meat.
- The cat skull is unusual among mammals in having very large eye sockets and a powerful specialized jaw.
- which allow them to pass their body through any space into which they can fit their head.
- Unlike human arms, cat forelimbs are attached to the shoulder by free-floating clavicle bones,
- Attached to the spine are 13 ribs, the shoulder, and the pelvis.
- The extra lumbar and thoracic vertebrae account for the cat's spinal mobility and flexibility.
- and a variable number of caudal vertebrae in the tail (humans have only three to five vestigial caudal vertebrae, fused into an internal coccyx).
- three sacral vertebrae (as do most mammals, but humans have five);