From Apex Predator To Clumsy Kitten | Lion In Your Living Room (Full Documentary) | Pets & Vets

Video Statistics and Information

Video
Captions Word Cloud
Reddit Comments
Captions
[Music] beautiful elegant mysterious they're the most popular pet in the world cute cuddly and fun but in every way built for the hunt one of the big appeals to me about cats is that they are these little little wild creatures that we share our space with is that touch of the wild what we most admire [Music] or something we want to change [Music] can these superlative hunters ever truly be domesticated i think the cat if it's going to persist as a as a popular companion animal is going to have to change in some way [Music] what do you really know about the lion in your living room [Music] a solitary hunter one of nature's most capable predators a symbol of grace balance and elegance [Music] it's hard to believe that these clumsy kittens have inherited the hunting prowess of their wild ancestors [Music] kittens play a great deal i mean it's one of the things that people find very appealing about them enchanting evening kitten plays is really just a whole load of hunting type behaviors where they're panting on things in the wild play hunting would soon give way to the real thing powerful muscles flexible bodies sharp claws sensitive paws even the delicate whiskers all play a role in the graceful movements of a true hunter surprisingly the cat's elegant walk is not very efficient compared to a dog's [Music] their gait evolved not to save energy but provide the stealth to hide and strike [Music] the same evolutionary demands have shaped some of the cat's cutest behaviors [Music] like the instinct to find a safe place to hide from enemies and to leap out at prey small but powerful an average house cat can leap five times its own height some even more climbing a tree in pursuit of dinner can prove dangerous one slip could end in disaster even if they fall upside down they can turn and land on their feet in as little as 30 centimeters that's not as simple as it sounds in fact at first it seems to defy the laws of physics [Music] as the cat begins falling her legs rotate allowing her to perform a seemingly impossible mid-air adjustment all in a fraction of a second before hitting the ground all four legs reach out to act as shock absorbers an ability useful for survival in forest or high-rise jungle where their curiosity can trip them up i'm dr koharikarman one of the veterinarians here at cats only veterinary clinic located in vancouver bc this is the time of year now that we start to see what's called high-rise syndrome and what that refers to is cats falling or jumping off of balconies and then ending up with uh injuries sometimes they come out unscathed and people always joke about those nine lives that cats have and and sometimes it seems there's a bit of truth to that [Music] cats can fall from really quite high buildings and they've got a very effective and and presumably completely instinctive spontaneous and very rapid strategy for dealing with that if they are do feel themselves falling a long distance they are actually able to parachute they stick their legs out literally sideways which then stretches the skin of the belly which does slow their progress down like their large carnivore cousins domestic cats spend most of their time between hunts resting they spend at least half their time asleep but when they move they can move quickly a house cat can run almost 50 kilometers an hour at least for a short burst and they have some unique physical features that can get them out of tight spaces they have what are called floating clavicles so their collarbones are not fixed in place to their skeleton they're floating in their muscles and that's how they can squeeze themselves into and out of very narrow spaces and also they have a compressible rib cage which helps in that department too a cat's evolutionary history as a predator that stalks and pounces for the kill is evident in how they play how they move and even in how their senses work i'm dr kelly saint denis i own the turing cross cat clinic it's an all cat clinic which makes a really nice environment for us and especially for the cats so these kittens were born seven days ago when kittens are born they are able to already smell fairly well so that how allows them to find the nipple so that they can nurse and get milk they don't really hear very well and they certainly can't see at newborn age their ears are flapped down and their eyes are closed at about five days of age they are able to hear and very gradually we can see that their ear flaps are starting to come up so that they will be able to hear much better by three weeks of age despite being born deaf it's their sense of hearing that best reveals their wild ancestry a cat's ears can swivel to help them locate the source of a sound pointing backwards forwards or sideways once mature they can hear two octaves higher than a human and a full octave higher even than a dog i mean cats can hear the squeaks of mice and it's probably very useful to them in hunting that they can hear what we call ultrasound which is being generated by their prey and enables them to track down their prey and locate it better their ability to hear ultrasonic squeaks too high pitched for human ears isn't the biggest surprise based on their physiology they shouldn't be able to hear the low frequencies to a biologist the really remarkable thing about a cat's hearing is not that it can hear the squeaks of mice but that it can hear human voices in a particular low pitched male human voices come good boy which the size of its head and the size of his ears therefore dictates that it shouldn't be able to hear [Music] it's not only the range of their hearing that makes cats successful hunters something which i think many people don't appreciate about the cat which is that it has a very good sense of smell i mean everybody thinks dogs have other species with the amazing sense of smell and of course that is true but cats are still about a thousand times more sensitive than we are the area inside the nose dedicated to trapping smells is five times larger in domestic cats than in humans while we have perhaps five million scent receptors the cat has 60 million or more what many cat owners don't appreciate is that cats actually have two olfactory systems so you have the regular one which is the same one that we have where the air is drawn in through the nose and over the olfactory membranes but also in common with many other mammals cats have a thing called the vomeronasal organ which is another olfactory organ the organ itself lies between the roof of the mouth and the nostrils and they're used this off this olfactory apparatus the vomeronasal organ is used when sniffing other cats smell and hearing are important to locate prey but vision provides more detailed information in about seven to fourteen days their eyes will open and they'll start to be able to see they won't be able to see very well until they are about four months of age at which point their vision will be approximately as they would for an adult they can hunt in the day or night but their eyes reveal that they prefer low light cats pupils have evolved to protect their sensitive retinas they also have these vertically constricting pupils as opposed to our round ones this allows their their pupillary size to change very quickly from contracted to dilated depending on what they're doing these well-protected eyes look out on a world that's very different than the one we see cat's vision is pretty different from our own they don't see as much in the way of color as we do they see mostly blues and grays they don't differentiate well between orange and brown and red and green but they have a few advantages that we don't they can see colors that we can't like ultraviolet perfect for tracking their prey's urine trails and these aren't the only ways in which the cat's eyes are adapted to hunting in the dark everybody has generally seen those uh reflective eyes at night or in photos and that is because of a special area on their retina the back of the eye called the tabitum lucidum and it acts almost like a mirror it's iridescent and basically bounces light off of it so that then it has a second chance to go through the lens basically enabling kitties to bring more light into their vision than is actually in the room um and see in the dark the cat's night vision allows it to hunt in the dark but their eyes don't work well at close range what that means is that things as they approach the cat will go out of focus probably around six to eight inches away from the cat's nose so it starts to go out of focus and also they lose binocular vision at that point they start seeing double the things that are close to them when the prey is close enough their whiskers can feel its exact location whiskers are thicker than other hairs and are full of blood vessels and sensitive nerve endings each of these specialized hairs transmits information about how fast and how far it's being bent allowing them to chase prey through the twists and turns of narrow tunnels even in total darkness this is oswald he is a neutered male purebred ragdoll and he's been coming to us since he was a kitten the whiskers that most people are familiar with in cats are the ones that are at the sides of their cheeks they also have whiskers or vibrasays the other name for these above their eye cats also have whiskers on the inside of their paws these whiskers also help with the spatial orientation it helps them to know where they can move to in what types of spaces [Music] even the cat's tongue has its secrets elegant creatures they don't lap up their drink like a dog [Music] looking closely her tongue appears to corkscrew as the liquid is drawn up if you've ever been licked by a cat you felt an irritating sand paper like rasp it's not the taste buds you feel but tiny barbs down the center of the tongue cats spend about 25 percent of their waking hours grooming themselves he's actually washing himself or trying to wash himself on his paws cats have a papilla on their tongue that are quite rough which will help them with their grooming to keep their coats healthy and matte free these act like combs when the cat is grooming or like knives when stripping the last scraps of meat from a bone the cat's sense of taste is kind of similar to ours in some ways because it is basically the same mammalian pattern of taste they taste with taste receptors on their tongues but in many ways that it ends there the kinds of things that the cat's tongue is sensitive to are really quite different to ours and those differences are because this little lion is a hunter who has evolved to need only meat in her diet they absolutely don't have the capacity to taste sweets because they're obligate carnivores they really aren't meant to ingest anything that has a sweet taste to it so it just doesn't serve a purpose for them it turns out that even the cat's reputation for being a finicky eater is about being a hunter at first it may seem like a bad idea for a wild creature to be picky about food especially an animal whose diet is so restricted we now know that our domestic pet cats do have nutritional wisdom they are capable of picking out which of a of a number of diets has the best protein content because cats need a great deal of protein in their diets far more than almost any other animal and they also have a strategy for addressing potential future nutritional imbalances which is to go out and look for something to eat that is not the same as the last meal you had that's partly behind the cat's kind of notorious fussiness rescued from a life of hunting and scavenging this cat remains very picky about the treats that she selects it's much more exaggerated much more easy to detect in cats which have had to live on the streets if you like that have had to select a balanced diet in order to survive and breed rather than simply being offered nutritionally complete food by their owners they are much fussier about what they eat than pet cats would if you can believe that [Music] born deaf blind and helpless in the wild all that keeps them from becoming prey to larger predators is their mother's care [Music] getting that can sometimes prove difficult [Music] accidentally pushed out of the nest this kitten instinctively cries for help [Music] fortunately her mother notices [Music] whether lions or leopards it's only the very young in most cat species who meow and then only to their mothers but domestic cats use this sound in other situations when they want attention mostly when communicating with humans what jesse jack jesse i have a treat for you look you want that all meows are not equal jack every cat has their own [Music] then again you want some din these are sounds that can have many meanings each cat and their humans must somehow agree on definitions some develop a large vocabulary [Music] so they'll have one meow for i'm hungry feed me and another one for please let me out the door and so on and these seem to be private languages that develop between the cat nyona and we know this because if you record these different meows and then play them back to different owners the owner of the cat of that particular cat will instantly recognize him that's the meow he makes when he wants to be let out that's the one he makes when he's hungry but play them to other cats owners even the owners of cats which have a repertoire of meows and they can't identify which is which beyond meowing cats have a number of vocal signals not that we always understand them this cat has no need to hunt for a meal still the old urges are there and they occasionally surface in surprising ways some cats make a special chattering sound when they are hunting or thinking how much they'd like to be it's not known exactly why some cats chatter whether it's frustration anticipation of the kill or an attempt to lure prey by imitation other sounds they make are less mysterious when they're quite unhappy we can see growling and hissing also certain vocalizing that that sounds almost basically like a cat or wall a yowl essentially that's a very unhappy and very stimulated cat but fortunately for us sybil right now is very content and purring away happily purring is another sound we associate with cats strangely we know little about it most people think that purring is an expression of emotion as far as the cat's concerned that the cat is happy and nine times out of ten that's true but it's not the reason for the purring it's doing it to to try to get you or another cat indeed um to do something for it kittens purr in order to get their mothers to settle down and nurse them and so that piece of communication goes on is carried on into adulthood [Music] large members of the cat family like lions and tigers can't purr the roaring cats don't purr but some of the smaller cats per i mean in fact the ability to roar sort of produces a change in the in the vocal apparatus which means that you can't purr karen mccomb studies animal communication in large animals like elephants and lions then her own cat peaked her interest in this apparently simple sound this came about simply because my own cat was very adept at soliciting food from me and in particular he had this sort of wake up purring routine where he would start giving this very insistent purring in the morning i thought why is it that this particular purring is so sort of unpleasant to the ear why is it that it's it does sound urgent and it's it's so difficult to ignore professor mccoomb compared the purrs of a number of cats including her own so this is the non-solicitation pair from my cat and you'll you'll see that it's actually it's a very regular purring classical purring type saw in fact this pearl was rated as one of the most pleasant of all the cats so what i'm going to do is play you the solicitation purr from my own cat and you should be able to hear that within the purr there's a sort of a slightly whiny element incredibly professor mccoomb discovered that this solicitation per was at a similar frequency to the cry of a human baby so it's got this sort of slightly manic element to it and if you um look at the screen here you'll see there's a dark band at in his case it's a bit over um 400 hertz but that is the sort of um cry uh like frequency and it's there very strongly in each of the main beats of the pair so that there is a frequency that's sort of jumping out of the rest of the sign spectrum at the point of this cry and the cats are somehow tapped into this sensory bias that we've got and are using it to improve the level of care they get solitary hunters who can get another species to do their bidding their dual nature fascinates us we watch them contentedly rolling at our feet one moment slinking off who knows where the next unlike dogs cats have another life usually hidden from us now thanks to modern technology we are getting a glimpse into the secret lives of cats [Music] studies reveal that most have a pretty defined turf an area that they patrol on a daily basis often not much more than a few blocks [Music] here's nathan there you go buddy [Music] this is obi jones of course there are exceptions brave explorers who travel great distances this is our kitty kinder he lives with a dog ruby we've been tracking kinder's adventure [Music] sometimes they need to go no further than a neighbor to get an extra treat you know what he comes here and he visits us almost every day does he really yes we love him he sits with my mom and dad does he really comes over and he sits with us and takes his little nap and we'll give him a piece of cheese or a little piece of bacon almost every day a cat's daily patrols are anything but random it's a way for them to mark and guard their turf even if you've never seen what happens when there's a conflict over territory you've almost certainly heard the results studies find that cats often share the same or overlapping territories they simply avoid patrolling at the same time like feline time sharing running into rivals isn't the only danger facing cats living on the streets the survival of great numbers of stray cats and feral cats that have never known human companionship proves their wild nature has been preserved these undomesticated domestic cats give us the best vantage point for understanding how these once wild animals adapted to life with humans cats certainly are not domesticated completely they are they are like little wild creatures and they still have the capacity to exist without us you would be hard-pressed to find a maltese or a teacup chihuahua who could make it on his own on the street and forage for food and seek shelter and reproduce and all the rest but cats are a whole other story many cities are struggling with large populations of cats that live all or some of the time on the street dealing with the feral cat explosion is often left up to concern neighbors the thing that means the most is the feeling that when you bring a cat off the street that you see has been either lost abandoned shoved aside pregnant because they didn't want her bringing that cat in seeing it in a home flourish respond to love and affection that's the best thing in the world we do a lot of work with the city of toronto and other organizations toronto humane society and we have to figure out how to deal with the feral cat overpopulation in the city come you muse they visit the feral cat colony get to know who's who and how they relate come on guys breakfast we were called to this colony by a gentleman who was feeding cats in a field and we were called out to help so when we came here when we came to the site we found way more cats than we ever imagined now there's probably 15 cats left give or take when we got here there was probably closer to 40 45 with kittens and we started trap new to return they feed them regularly trap them have their injuries treated and most importantly have them neutered they may be the same species as the animals who live in our homes but if they aren't exposed to a human touch early enough they will remain untamable cuts who have not had socialization with humans prior to 14 weeks of age they are much more prone to be very fearful um not want to approach humans take a very long time to establish trust and are also more prone to being fearfully aggressive it's not that they can't learn to trust humans that capacity is still there and they still do retain some behavioral plasticity but it can be a very long road we do have patients who were feral cats then when they were rescued and taken in by their people took a matter of months to years actually before they established trust with their owners [Music] those who can learn to tolerate humans can be put up for adoption like these looking as domestic as can be successfully adopted from a feral colony cats that live without humans for too long don't easily adapt to life with us one solution is to give them shelters where they can receive medical attention and live in relative comfort my name is janet reed and i'm the manager here at the number six road shelter for the richmond animal protection society and what we have here is about 500 cats that we take care of because they're homeless they were cats that were born in the wild have never had a home or maybe were dumped and we're living in the wild we trap them we spay and neuter them and we make sure they have their shots in bed care and then we bring them in here so they have a place to be we put them in colonies if they come 10 15 at a time which has happened to us it's a lot of cats to deal with but we keep them together they know each other we don't have to try and adapt them to the rest of the cats at the shelter and despite what everybody seems to think of this is a cat club med cats don't necessarily always get along with each other [Music] when the environment enables them to they will live together and establish a hierarchy and generally that does mean that there's some some hissing and posturing and fighting for a while until that has been established then if new cats try to enter it's possible for them to integrate themselves but there will be a few tests along the way but then other times a new cat is completely shunned and doesn't manage to work their way into a colony observing feral colonies tells us about the nature of these very territorial animals and their social lives [Music] maintaining limits and alliances requires constant communication [Music] messages of all kinds being sent and received displays of warning and acknowledgement one key social signal is the straight-up tail we think that a tail up signal evolved from a signal that kittens use to signal to their mothers and they use this around the time of weaning and it's seen in a number of wild cat species not just the wild cat that's the ancestor of the domestic cat and they're probably using this as a way of greeting their mother when she returns the nest with food for them and it may be one of the ways of persuading her to feed them but in all those other species they then stop doing it once they reach adulthood domestic cats have taken this kitten to mother signal to a whole new level when two cats approach each other one may raise their tail straight up if the other is willing to coexist it will respond in the same way so it's meaning two things it's meaning friendly intentions i'm approaching you in a friendly way i'm not about to attack you and it's also acknowledging uh a difference in status if you like i'm not saying that cats have a mental conception an abstract conception of status but they clearly do need to indicate the type of interaction they want to happen so what they're saying is i'm friendly towards you and i acknowledge that you are in some way bigger or smarter than than i am studying feral cats has given us more than new insights into their social relations [Music] comparing dna from various species of cats wild feral and domestic large and small from all over the world helped solve the mystery of how cats evolved and eventually became domesticated so a wild cat the ancestor of the domestic cat is a species called felis silvestris felis silvestrus is a very broad-ranging species that ranges all the way from the tip of scotland down to the cape of good hope in south africa all the way from portugal out to the center of china and there are five different wild subspecies of fila sylvester the wild cat one of those subspecies felis sylvester's lubica lived in the near east and it's that subspecies that gave rise to the domestic cat professor driscoll pinpointed this part of the mideast as the center where felis silvestris libica gradually transformed into the familiar kitty felis katus domestic cats of every breed friendly or feral wherever in the world you find them have their genesis here their wildcat ancestors can still be spotted outside the cities but since they prefer to hunt in the dark it's a lot easier if you have local biologists to guide you fox [Music] this fish farm is a popular hunting spot but tonight there are no wild cats to be found these are jungle cats the largest member of the family that includes both the domestic cat and their ancestor the wild cat they are drawn here by the promise of an easy meal last night on some fish ponds here bordering the jordan we saw felix schaus the jungle cat and we saw how they're becoming habituated they're accustomed to human presence and they're following a path similar to what the wildcats did where they're moving in out of the wild and they're utilizing human habitats and human resources in a way that's probably very similar to what the wildcats would have done thousands of years ago in the early stages of domestication the first step in cat domestication happened here thanks to a unique combination of a small wild cat that could tolerate people and an abundance of wild grains this is the habitat where plants and animals were domesticated prior to what we see now something around 15 16 000 years ago till 10 000 years ago people were hunter-gatherers they had enough to collect and and use it for their own use right once people became settled that's when cats began to move into that environment and began to adapt themselves to that human environment and then from there they eventually evolved into the domestic animals that we have today so in that sense you can make you know you can say that cat domesticated human he came over to where the humans were and then took advantage of what they uh made some people think we domesticated cats so they could control the rodents that ate our grain professor driscoll doesn't agree he doesn't believe it was mice and rats that drew them into our homes it was our garbage the scene we see here is one that's played out here in jerusalem and other cities of the ancient near east many thousands of times over the last tens of millennia you have cats that are making use of human waste and scraps essentially being fed by people it's by this process that the wildcat was brought into human civilizations and developed over time into the domestic cat that we have today cats found our settlements a profitable place to hang out so do cats catch mice and rats yeah certainly they do and some of them are not bad at it but that's not why they were domesticated they were domesticated accidentally when people at later age decided they really wanted to get rid of mice and rats they used dogs as specific hunters of vermin but what did we gain from this arrangement if it wasn't vermin control cats didn't have a purpose then they don't have a purpose now i'm not sure they'll ever have a purpose but they're good pets and that seems to have been enough to bring them all the way around the world perhaps we'll never know but those initial inter-species contexts grew into admiration and more the ancient egyptians adored and even worshipped their cats egypt was the first place that cats were bred in captivity it's a place where domestic cats lived in high enough density that they're well represented in artwork and archaeological remains throughout common people's houses [Music] when cats were first domesticated probably for half of their domestication maybe the first five thousand years they would have all looked like wildcats that is the striped tabby that's the wild type coat colour the first changes in the cat's coat colour were probably the appearance of black cats which is just in fact the absence of colour the coat goes black because the jeans creating the tabby pattern don't work properly anymore and that probably occurred in egypt early on so you find very few cats or records of cats outside of early egypt at that time however the city of alexandria was a very large port city in the ancient world and cats were able to spread from ancient egypt throughout all of europe and north africa in a very brief period of time and so domestic cats boarded ships that would carry them from their mid-eastern birthplace to every continent on the planet as they spread around the globe new coat colors appeared one of them closely linked to of all things the vikings [Music] somewhere along the line some population of vikings decided they liked orange cats why orange cats were favored is not clear they're not any better mousers they're not any more adept at living on boats but what you find is that the frequency of orange cats is higher where the vikings were trading ginger or orange cats are still most common exactly in those areas where the vikings most frequently made landfall over time new coat colors appeared and spread most often by ship i think one of the best coat color variations that we know about where there is an association between trade routes and a coat color is with the blotched tabby and we know that that mutation arose in great britain in the early 1800s that was the beginning both of modern cat breeding and the cat show cat breeding has been going on for over a century now of actually breeding true so crossing like with like forming breeds which essentially where the offspring look just like the parents and these have been essentially formed from a number of different street cats from different parts of the world unlike dogs that were bred for a wide range of jobs and so come in all different sizes and shapes cats didn't have any special tasks to accomplish and the variation has really just been an appearance some of it's to do with the head shape obviously you have some of the breeds like the persians with the very flattened face you have a great number of variations of coat color and length [Music] so many of these breeds are really superficially different from your average pet cat rather than being very different functionally some of us prefer a particular coat color thinking it's linked to certain behaviors many believe that orange cats are easygoing and friendly while white cats are lazy or shy and calicos are thought to be feisty or difficult calicos are somewhat renowned for their their temperaments they make wonderful wonderful pets but they don't tend to adjust very well to new environments and new people but the connection between jeans coat color and behavior is far from clear there is some genetic link the genes haven't been isolated so nobody knows for sure but the hows and whys of temperament are increasingly important cats are instinctively solitary predators who patrol the hunting ground around their homes now we want them to stay indoors not hunt and to live with other animals perhaps the most serious misconception that people have their cats at least as far as its impact on the cat is concerned is this idea that cats get along that having one cat is good having two cats could not be anything but better now it may be better for the owner but the likelihood is that it's not going to be better for the cats that uh if they're not introduced to one another very carefully then those two cats will end up being more stressed for the rest of their lives than they would have been if they lived apart [Music] for every household where cats happily coexist there are many others where our pets suffer because of the proximity of rivals living with other cats is not the most difficult demand we are suddenly placing on the instincts of our favorite pets there's no doubt we love them but there are some behaviors that most of us could do without where we once took pride in their talents as hunters now we are ashamed of their seemingly ferocious nature it's certainly true that cats have been getting a lot of bad press recently in terms of their role as hunters as surplus killers as animals which go out and kill for the fun of it as as people would have it the first thing to dispel is that they're not doing it for the fun of it they're doing it because it's a piece of very instinctive behavior that they've inherited from their wild ancestors and more than that during domestication we've actually encouraged them to continue to do that and there is concern about the long-term effects of our cats on wildlife populations however bradshaw thinks that our pets are only a small part of the problem he believes a larger part may be due to feral cats but nevertheless you know a dead bird is a dead bird i think you have to admit that cats are doing something which is unnecessary it may not be permanently damaging to the populations but if you if you are concerned for the welfare of wildlife and many people are then cats are not really doing the right thing a lot of slaughter or a little can't we just eliminate it by keeping our cats inside where they will also be safe from predators fights and traffic there's a really big debate on whether people should keep their cats indoors or outdoors and certainly outdoors will provide the cat with more environmental enrichment in terms of being able to explore the outdoor environment the problem with being an outdoor cat i would say is that there are significantly more health risks out there so they are more likely to get attacked by other animals they're more likely to get into fights with other cats they can get hit by cars asking our cats to stay indoors is not as straightforward as it seems we expect them to be happy and the reality is because they are hunters they need to have stimulation they need to be doing things and what's happening now is we're starting to recognize that they're anxious or bored in their indoor environment for thousands of years we had a mutual understanding a contract suddenly we want to rewrite the terms we are asking these territorial creatures to tolerate other animals live happily inside and abandon hunting we're expecting the cat to make a big change from being essentially a predator that we kept in our homes and got some companionship from as a secondary function to being an animal which is first and foremost a companion and really nothing else and we don't want it to go hunting that i think the cat if it's going to to persist as a as a popular companion animal is going to have to change in some way [Music] the key to the survival of the domestic cat may already be in their genes if their wild nature is hardwired so is their adaptability it's made our 10 000 year long journey together possible they've thrived under our thatched roofs in our palaces barns and apartments and it will guarantee these little lions a comfortable place in our lives for a long time to come [Music] [Music] you
Info
Channel: Pets & Vets
Views: 461,415
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: lion in your living room netflix, lion in your living room stream, lion in your living room trailer, cat documentary animal planet, cat documentary national geographic, cat documentary bbc, cat documentary uk, animal documentary, pet tv show, animal tv show, house cats hunting, house cats fighting, house cats documentary, house cats vs stray cats, house cats playing, cat documentary, pet documentary, secret life of pets
Id: wTol3QgSyyk
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 50min 23sec (3023 seconds)
Published: Sun Jul 31 2022
Related Videos
Note
Please note that this website is currently a work in progress! Lots of interesting data and statistics to come.