Wonder why your pet cat asks for more food when the chill sets in? The felines, like humans, need comfort food during the winter!
Cats eat more during the winter and owners should give their pet more food during this time, a new research has found.
Researchers from the University of Liverpool, and colleagues at the Royal Canin Research Centre in France, spent four years monitoring how much cats chose to eat, and found that food intake increased in colder months and decreased during the summer.
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"Cats, like many humans are more inclined to comfort eat when it's cold outside but, in their case, it's likely to be due to the extra energy they need to keep warm when out and about," Veterinarian and study author, Dr Alex German, said.
The study found that cats ate approximately 15 per cent less food during summer, and the vets have concluded that the extra effort to keep warm in winter and the temptation to rest during hot summer days contributed to the swing in activity levels during the year.
The cats were all inhabitants of a centre in southern France where they were allowed to play and exercise outside all year round. The cats were of mixed breeds, ages and genders.
Data on food was compared to the climate in the area using computer modelling to provide information about how the temperature changed over the year.
Seasonal food intake has also been examined in the past on farm animals, such as dairy cows, to establish new ways of increasing milk production, but this is the largest study that has yet taken place with domestic cats.
"People should consider the amount of food their cats need at different times of year as this can be part of helping them to maintain a healthy weight," German said.
The research was published in the journal PLOS One.