It is not unusual for cats to bring in dead or petrified mice and birds, but turning up with random objects is harder to explain. Researchers suspect a number of causes but tend to agree on one point: the pilfered items are not presents.
"We are not sure why cats behave like this," says Auke-Florian Hiemstra, a biologist at the Naturalis Biodiversity Center, a museum in Leiden in the Netherlands. "All around the world there are cats doing this, yet it has never been studied."
The clothing crime spree, perpetrated this year by a mother and her two offspring in the small town of Frigiliana in southern Spain, has made neighbourly interactions somewhat awkward for their owner, Rachel Womack. But for scientists such as Hiemstra, it has provided fresh impetus to study the animals.
"I want to know exactly why they do it," he says. "And documenting cases like this could be the start of more research in the future."
klepto-cats Hiemstra heard of the from the Dutch visual artist Anne Geene, a friend of Womack who mentioned the cats' antics. Intrigued, Geene flew to Spain to photograph the haul for a book, Low Hanging Fruit. Hiemstra, who studies the contested ground where animals and humans collide, wrote an introduction, noting: "This is their collection, their criminal record. But why would a cat collect such trophies?"
Bu hikaye The Guardian dergisinin July 20, 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye The Guardian dergisinin July 20, 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
George says Jones regime successful but 'challenging'
The England captain, Jamie George, has admitted that Eddie Jones's regime could be \"challenging\" and empathises with Danny Care after his explosive claims about the Australian's setup, insisting that a toxic environment is not a necessary price to pay for success.
'He respects I'm in charge': Carsley has not spoken with Tuchel about England squad
Lee Carsley has revealed he is yet to speak to Thomas Tuchel about the England squad he will hand over to him in the new year.
Osimhen makes Spurs pay as Lankshear scores and sees red
When everyone had gathered breath, the only surprise was that Tottenham had run Galatasaray so close.
Diallo steps into Rashford's shoes to end United's wait for victory
Hold on to your hat: Manchester United are victorious in Europe after three consecutive Europa League draws and three more without winning in last term's Champions League.
Arsenal will take time to replace Edu
Arsenal plan to take their time over appointing Edu's successor as sporting director, with his deputy, Jason Ayto, set to step until the recruitment process has been completed.
'I had the same feeling as Harry: do Spurs really want to win?'
In exclusive extracts from his autobiography, the goalkeeper tells of the dismay he and others felt at how well the club took losing the 2019 Champions League final
Félix leads Chelsea's finishing masterclass
When the idea for the Europa Conference League first came to UEFA, it is unlikely that anybody in Nyon envisaged that one day a club of Chelsea's means would be pumping six unanswered first-half goals past an Armenian outfit who were only founded seven years ago.
Coventry end Robins' long reign
Coventry have made the surprise decision to sack Mark Robins, with the Championship club's board unhappy over \"the performance of the team over an extended period\", despite describing the 54-year-old as one of the Sky Blues' \"greatest ever managers\".
Trescothick wants 50-over change after latest defeat
Marcus Trescothick has said the current domestic structure is \"not helping\" England's new generation of white-ball cricketers.
Drivers warn FIA: start treating us like adults
Formula One drivers have demanded the FIA stops treating them like children in a damning indictment of the governing body's policies and its president, Mohammed Ben Sulayem.