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Any health care links located here are NOT to replace a veterinarian visit; please take your cat to a vet immediately at any sign of odd behavior or any symptoms of illness or injury. Call your vet and describe your cat's symptoms with any of your concerns about the cat's well-being. Your veterinarian may discover changes in your cat's health that you have overlooked. It is always better to err on the side of caution.
Developmental Stages of Kitten Behavior

Well-socialized cats are more likely to have well-socialized kittens. Kittens feed off of their mothers’ calm or fearful attitude toward people. Although feeding time is important, it is also vital to include petting, talking and playing in order to build good people skills in your kitten.

Kittens are usually weaned at six or seven weeks, but may continue to suckle for comfort as their mother gradually leaves them more and more. Orphaned kittens, or those weaned too soon, are more likely to exhibit inappropriate suckling behaviors later in life. Ideally, kittens should stay with their littermates (or other role-model cats) for at least 12 weeks.

Kittens orphaned or separated from their mother and/or littermates too early often fail to develop appropriate social skills, such as learning how to send and receive signals, what an inhibited bite means, how far to go in play-wrestling and so forth. Play is important for kittens because it increases their physical coordination, social skills and learning limits. By interacting with their mother and littermates kittens learn how to be a cat, as well as explore the ranking process (who is in charge).

Kittens that are handled 15 to 40 minutes a day during the first seven weeks are more likely to develop larger brains. They are more exploratory, more playful and are better learners. Skills not acquired during the first eight weeks may be lost forever. While these stages are important and fairly consistent, a cat’s mind remains receptive to new experiences and lessons well beyond kittenhood. Most cats are still kittens, in mind and body, through the first two years.

The following chart provides general guidelines for the stages of development.

Neonatal - 0 to 2 weeks
    Learning to orient toward sound.
    Eyes are opening, usually open by two weeks.
    Competition for rank and territory begins. Separation from their mother and littermates at this point can lead to poor learning skills and aggression toward people and other pets, including other cats.
Socialization - 3 to 7 weeks
    By the third week smell is well-developed and they can see well enough to find their mother.
    By the fourth week smell is fully mature and hearing is well-developed. They start to interact with their littermates, they can walk fairly well, and their teeth are erupting.
    By the fifth week sight is fully mature, they can right themselves, run, place their feet precisely, avoid obstacles, stalk and pounce, and catch prey with their eyes.
    Start to groom themselves and others.
    By the sixth and seventh weeks they begin to develop adult sleeping patterns, motor abilities and social interaction.
Most Active Play Period - 7 to 14 weeks
    Social and object play increases their physical coordination and social skills. Most learning is by observation, preferably from their mother.
    Social play includes belly-ups, hugging, ambushing and licking.
    Object play includes scooping, tossing, pawing, mouthing and holding.
    Social/object play includes tail chasing, pouncing, leaping and dancing.
Ranking Period - 3 to 6 months
    Most influenced by their litter (playmates now include companions of other species).
    Beginning to see and use ranking (dominant and submissive) within the household, including humans.
Adolescence - 6 to 18 months
    Heightened exploration of dominance, including challenging humans.
    If not spayed or neutered, beginnings of sexual behavior.
Page URL: http://www.sniksnak.com/cathealth/kittendev.html

Resource References:
Courtesy of Dumb Friends League. All Rights Reserved.

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