Which spring cue can affect a cat's breeding rhythm?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: Longer daylight
Longer daylight ✓ — Correct! Cats are commonly described as long-day breeders. In intact females, increasing daylight can help shift the hormonal system toward estrous cycling. So spring matters less because the air feels poetic, and more because the light schedule has changed.
More flower smells — Wrong. New plant smells can make a cat investigate, but flower scent is not the main switch for feline breeding rhythm. Smell may change attention or patrol behavior; daylight is the sharper reproductive cue.
The calendar turning March — Wrong. March is a human label. A cat's body is responding to physical signals such as day length and local environment, which is why geography, indoor lighting, and climate can shift the timing.
More Animal Behavior questions
- When should you worry if a cat suddenly gets very clingy?
- A cat suddenly yowls more on spring nights. Which conclusion is weakest?
- Which claim about cats in spring is safest?
- A cat cuddles you in a sunbeam. Why might it choose that spot?
- Why may an open window make a cat patrol more?
- When a cat rubs your leg, what else may it be doing?
