While in recent years, cats have become household fixtures, they used to be mostly viewed as pest control -- and for good reason. Just about every part of a cat’s anatomy enhances its predatory skills.
Photo: Flickr via Creative Commons/Axel Rouvin
Cat vision is precise, in color and works in both daylight and low light.
Start with the eyes. Cats see as well as humans in daylight and six times better than people in poor light. This is because they can open up their pupils much larger than humans can, enhancing their eyes’ ability to collect light. Cats have the highest developed binocular vision of all carnivores, meaning they have great depth perception. And they can see in color -- in contrast to dogs, which have limited color vision.
Photo: Flickr via Creative Commons/curtis.kennington
A shorter muzzle means a wider and stronger bite.
The cat’s jaw and teeth are also specially adapted for killing. Their shorter muzzles mean they can deliver a stronger and wider bite, and their canine teeth are exceptionally strong. One of their premolars also has an interesting add-on -- a special spur called an anterior cusp, which allows it to crush bones.
Photo: Flickr via Creative Commons/uncle.capung
Your cat's tongue might tickle when she licks you, but she can also use it to strip flesh off of bones.
The sharp ridges on a cat’s tongue that make it feel rough and sandpaper-like are called papillae. These little spines are made of keratin, the same stuff that’s in hair and fingernails, and come in handy whether a cat is grooming itself or stripping flesh off of the bones of a bird or mouse.
Photo: Flickr via Creative Commons/benkucinski
Swiveling ears can catch the high-pitched squeaks of a soon-to-be unlucky mouse.
A cat’s ears are particularly good at catching the high-pitched frequencies made by rodents. The rounded shape of the ear funnels even the softest or highest of sounds inward, allowing them to pick up minute traces of prey.
Photo: Flickr via Creative Commons/yellowcloud
Whiskers aren't just cute -- they help guide a cat straight to a prey animal's windpipe.
Their whiskers can also pick up tiny vibrations that help them zero in on an unsuspecting meal. When a cat has captured a small animal, it will usually extend its whiskers in front of its mouth to sense where best to deliver a lethal bite.
Photo: Flickr via Creative Commons/polandeze
A cat's specialized muscle and bones add up to some serious hang time.
The cat’s hunting prowess also owes much to its nature as both a sprinter and acrobat. Cat spines are very flexible, allowing them to put more muscles in gear when running and attain faster speeds. They can rotate half of their spine about 180 degrees and jump many times their own height. Because cats’ collar bones are not attached to the shoulder joint and their shoulderblades swing along with their legs, they have a broader range of movement and can also slip through small spaces.
Photo: Flickr via Creative Commons/Foamzy
Cats' paws are far more dextrous than dogs'.
Because a cat’s claws are retractable and kept sheathed while walking, they maintain their sharpness. The pads and fur on a cat’s feet also muffle its steps, helping it stalk prey silently. Cats can also rotate their wrists, unlike dogs, giving their paws a greater dexterity and allowing for a broad range of movements like grasping, climbing and swiping.
Photo: Flickr via Creative Commons/Kai Hendry
Cat owners may already be familiar with their pets' murderous abilities.
All of these adaptations added together make for a fearsome hunting machine -- one that scientists say might be decimating animals, including migratory birds and native wildlife, across the U.S.
In an article published in the journal Nature Communications on Tuesday, researchers from the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service estimated that “free-ranging” domestic cats -- a group that includes both feral cats and pet cats that are allowed to roam outside -- kill between 1.4 billion and 3.7 billion birds each year.
They also wagered that cats are responsible for the deaths of between 6.9 billion and 20.7 billion mammal deaths.
“Our findings suggest that free-ranging cats cause substantially greater wildlife mortality than previously thought and are likely the single greatest source of anthropogenic mortality for U.S. birds and mammals,” the authors wrote.
One New Zealand businessman, faced with a national catastrophe, has taken the bold step of calling for his countrymen to stop keeping cats.

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