After the full moon, the kitten grew up, became naughty, liked to bite, and gradually began to bite her mother. At this time, the mother cat may bite the kitten as an education to let the kitten know that her behavior is not allowed.
Or, the kitten will start weaning in the process of raising the mother cat, but because the mother cat produces more milk, the kitten is more eager and the wound may tear. The mother cat will also warn the kitten that her behavior is not allowed.
Mother protects her milk from being wasted by kittens.
When kittens are young, there will be plenty of milk, which often can't be drunk, and this kind of sufficient milk may lead to problems such as mastitis of cat mothers. Therefore, the mother cat may bite the kitten to prevent the kitten from relying too much on milk and protect herself from being wasted by the kitten.
At the same time, this behavior also helps the mother cat to maintain her wounds after being sucked by the baby and prevent the mother cat from being disturbed by the kitten.
3. Maternal instinct
Mother cats are full of desire to protect their kittens and will protect their children from all kinds of dangers from the outside world. After the kitten's full moon, the mother cat began to educate the kitten and let it learn how to survive. Biting kittens at this time is to educate kittens and let them know the consequences of dangerous behavior.
At the same time, the mother cat's nature is to resist the biting reaction of foreign objects, not only to her children like kittens, but also to people or animals she doesn't know outside.
4. nervousness and emotional instability
In the process of taking care of the kitten, the mother cat needs to bear a lot of mental stress. If the pressure is too high, it may lead to nervousness and emotional instability. In this case, the mother cat may be annoyed by the kitten's behavior and express her emotions by biting.
At this time, we should pay attention to leaving enough time and space for the mother cat to relax and relieve stress.