Placeholder Image

字幕列表 影片播放

  • Hey Eva come on over here want me  to brush you? Hey sweet kitty…. 

  • This is CrowdScience from the BBC World Service,  

  • the show that takes your science questions  for a prowl and hunts down the answers

  • I’m Melanie Brown, and this is Eva, the  feline muse behind this week’s question

  • Did you wanna play? Get ready! Oh! If you  didn’t run into me you could maybe catch it

  • Oops. Oh nearly got it

  • Eva loves to play, and has the ultimate  pampered life within the 4 walls of her  

  • apartment in Kobe Japan. Oh, where did it go

  • But is it maybetoo comfortable? Watching  her play one day, her devoted human owner  

  • Rachelor should that be employee? -  decided to get in touch with CrowdScience

  • I'm wondering if my former street cat could  survive out on her own again. Conveniently my  

  • cat is behind my computer. Let's  see, can we oh, there she is. Hi Eva

  • And can you tell me a bit about herWhy, why did you ask that question

  • RASo she was born on the streets, andlady I know, rescues street kittens and  

  • finds homes for them. Eva was maybe about five  months old when the lady finally caught her.  

  • And then it was about a month later that she came  to our house. Like the first week she just hid  

  • behind the washing machine. But it didn't take  very long before she kind of warmed up to us  

  • and got comfortable living inside. What makes you doubt her ability  

  • to survive by herself? We noticed like when she plays  

  • she would sometimes like fall off of the  furniture like not use her claws to catch herself.  

  • Or when she jumps sometimes she misses where  she’s landing. And her reaction time is kind of  

  • hilariously slow. Which made my husband asked me  like if we threw her back on the streets - would  

  • she survive? And I really couldn’t answer that. But Eva is my first indoor only cat so that that  

  • also made me wonder if she kind of got  more domesticated than our cats that went  

  • outside where they could still hunt if they  wanted to or maybe defend themselves against  

  • something. You know she's totally relaxed  in here. She has she has no enemies other  

  • than you know my one year old daughter. I was really interested in this question  

  • because my cat Frida also has questionable  survival instincts. The only thing she’s gifted  

  • me was a dragonfly, and…. I think it might  have already been dead before she caught it

  • Don’t get offended Frida, you can believe  what you want, I still love you. Anyway,  

  • it’s good news for the neighbourhood wildlife  if they don’t have to worry about you.  

  • But to help answer Rachel’s question,  I went to meet a cat who really does  

  • know how to handle herself outside the home I came across this cat by sheer chance because I  

  • just was walking along here and sitting gloriously  and window looking at very smug with a cat with  

  • a collar who got completely content. So  by sheer chance we knocked on the door.

  • You basically talent spotted the cat I talent spotted the cat

  • That’s Roger Tabor, cat  biologist and behaviourist.  

  • His pioneering work tracking cats by  attaching GPS and mini cameras to them,  

  • helped our understanding of cat behaviour  inside and outside the homehow far they roam  

  • and what they get up to out of our sight. And were here to meet one of his research  

  • subjects…. Queen of the Neighbourhood…. Allow me to introduce Scrumpy. Hello, Scrumpy..  

  • Scrumpy literally just put her paws right  up on your leg in quite sort of friendly,  

  • Hello, Roger! She’s a fantastic cat.

  • Black and white, quite petite.

  • Very petite.

  • Oh, wow, looking at me with big golden  eyes. So Roger were here because of our  

  • listener Rachel's question about how well her  cat would survive if it had to fend for itself  

  • in the in the wild, and Scrumpy’s going to  help us understand cat behaviour. You've put  

  • cat cam is it yes, a cat sat, that  is a tongue twister, isn't it?  

  • You've put GPS tracker and a camera on ScrumpyAnd you've followed her on her adventures  

  • outside of the house, what have you  found out about what she's up to?  

  • Indoors she's quiet, cute. If you look at her now  she's sitting on her own Jo's lap in a contented  

  • way. When you get outside, with a normal female  cat, and particularly small female cat as she is,  

  • you would expect a small range. And the most  startling thing weve found, she goes around  

  • a much bigger range - 10 times bigger than it  should be. She goes up onto that little small  

  • shed, and then onto the fence behind. And then  the world is her oyster, she uses the tops of  

  • fences along the bits there, suddenly youre into  much more varied areas there, going down, finding  

  • chicken carcasses, pulling them out. And there  is a garden, which has got Rottweilers in it!  

  • Rottweilers pretty big dogs, Which are known to be short fused.  

  • She goes over there quite quite happily. There’s  a yew tree which shell sit under for hours. And  

  • gradually you build up how  she leads her life. fade under

  • MEL: While we were around, Scrumpy wasn’t going  to go on the prowlobviously she had to keep  

  • a watchful eye on us and live up to the cat  stereotype of doing exactly the opposite of  

  • what we wanted her to. So Roger showed us one  of her adventures recorded on her CAT CAM.

  • Be warned. Oh no. The camera  

  • angle’s incredible actually, you get a little  glimpse of the nose and her whiskers sneaking in  

  • thereRight so this looks like woodland Roger. It's a normal garden. There's a lot of trees,  

  • so she's made this as a great  place to go and sit in and relax in  

  • but it's not necessarily always just hers. So she’s quite low to the undergrowth.

  • That's quite dramatic. But  what's actually happening  

  • is not a full fight. So wait, we just saw  

  • another cat come into view then If you see how that other cat  

  • just exploded and it's a big adult male and the  claws are really out. But what you're seeing  

  • now is that big adult cat saving face, it's  the one that's going away. When actually the  

  • cat who is in residence who's won is tiny  Scrumpy. She is a fraction of his size.  

  • She is a female cat, she should not be seeing off  a big male, tough cat like that. But she does.

  • Scrumpy is clearly quite a different beast from  my meek cat Frida or listener Rachel’s Eva.  

  • So how come she is quite so feisty, which as Roger  says is very unusual for a small female cat?  

  • Yeah, this is a huge question. And it's  what makes me so fascinated about Scrumpy  

  • more than any other cat. There might be  genetically a predisposition to be slightly more  

  • spiky if you like. But her upbringing was  key, because it was a fairly rough household.  

  • She was found living in the back of a sofa  with these other litter mates. There were  

  • some large dogs there as well. So just surviving  at all, she had to be a bit of a tough cookie.  

  • A cat’s kittenhood, Roger explained, shapes  its survival skills. Scrumpy obviously got  

  • good at defending herself, and hunting is  another thing that a kitten learns early on.

  • When you're about four weeks of age mum  starts bringing in initially very dead prey.  

  • And then, slightly less dead prey. And you willby competing with her, you will as a little kitten  

  • learn from your Mum what to do. The cat is an  animal that has this capability of hunting,  

  • yes youve got those wonderful claws that flick  out. You have to be trained how to use it.  

  • So early life has a big effect on how  a cat might fend for itself outdoors,  

  • and from what I’ve seen of Scrumpy, I’d  say she’d have pretty good survival odds.  

  • As for our listener’s cat Eva? Well come back  to Roger later in the show to find out how  

  • he rates her chances. But I’m curious to find  out more about the wild side of our pet cats.

  • Cats are well-known for their proud  independence, especially when compared  

  • to that other pet favourite, dogs. But though  cats do a good imitation of a wild animal,  

  • how similar are they to their actual wild cousins?

  • So my name is Jamie Baker. I'm the head keeper  at Battersea Park Children's Zoo. And today I'm  

  • introducing you to our Scottish Wildcats. So we  have two female Scottish Wildcats here we've got  

  • Livvi and we've got Skye. This time of  the morning when the sun is shining on  

  • the back of their enclosure they like to  be up nice and high. So they've got quite  

  • a good view of everything around them. So Jamie, you've got a metal container  

  • in your hand with a lot of fluff  poking out the top. What is that?  

  • So I've got some rabbit, we give them a mixture  of different meat and fish throughout the week,  

  • similar to what they would eat out in the wild and  rabbit is their favourite. Still have the fur on!

  • Literally is feeding time at  the zoo. That squirrel is just  

  • outside the enclosure, it's really taunting cats.  

  • It would definitely be lunch if it  was inside! They still do occasionally  

  • catch their own food as well. Haven’t lost their skills.  

  • And I'm just gonna head inside now. Where are the cats? Are they going to follow him?  

  • Oh, he’s just thrown the rabbit  onto the platform right next to  

  • one of the cats but she won't be able to see it. Oh she is.  

  • Oh! She's grabbed it and she’s run off. She’s going to be nice and secretive  

  • and take it back to bed. Breakfast in bed, very sensible.

  • So it's interesting looking at these cats, theyre  sort of striped, tawny coloured, they do look  

  • very similar to my pet cat, to domestic catsHow closely related are these are the Scottish  

  • Wildcats to the cats we have in our homes? To the untrained eye, physically Scottish  

  • Wildcats look very similar to a domestic moggieBut it's mostly down to the personality and  

  • genetics. Our domestic cats that we have at home  are more related to wild descendants from Africa.  

  • In terms of their behaviour? They're  much more feisty, quite like their name  

  • suggests they are very wild. And would they be tameable?  

  • Definitely not. There are lots and lots of  records from many, many years ago of people  

  • saying that they've been able to tame a Scottish  wildcat, but it's actually never been proven.  

  • By nature, they do not get on with humans very  well. Whereas our domestic cats have evolved to  

  • be alongside humans, whether that be taking  food from us or just living around humans.  

  • Scottish wildcats are very much evolved for life  out in the wilds away from human civilization.

  • This is a key difference. True  wildcats can never be tamed,  

  • while the domestic cat will be friendly if it  gets used to us in the first few months of life.

  • On the other hand, if born in the wild, that same  domestic species can live completely independently  

  • of humans. But these feral cats are causing  serious problems for the Scottish wildcat…  

  • At the moment Scottish wildcats are actually  one of the most critically endangered animals  

  • on the planet. At one point, they were spread  right across Britain, and it's estimated after  

  • a big study in 2018 that there is only around 30  to 100 Scottish Wildcats left up in the highlands.  

  • Today, the main reason for them disappearing  is actually hybridization with feral cats. So  

  • feral cats are basically domestic cats that have  rediscovered their wild side. And they're living  

  • out in natural habitats hunting for themselvesand they're breeding with Scottish Wildcats,  

  • and we're ending up with fewer and fewer pure  Scottish Wildcats left out in the wild.  

  • The Scottish wildcats here are part of  a UK-wide captive breeding programme,  

  • that plans to release wildcats from next  year into rewilding enclosures in Scotland,  

  • where hopefully theyll be  protected from feral cats.

  • Were focusing in this show on whether our  listener’s cat could survive in the wild, but it’s  

  • important to consider the effect on other animals’  survival, if domestic cats are let loose….

  • Our domestic cats do quite well out in  the wild looking for their own food.  

  • But not only are they hybridising, with Scottish  Wildcats, and we're losing an iconic predator,  

  • but they also hunt small birds  and rodents and amphibians that  

  • are also quite rare in this countryAnd because domestic cats aren't  

  • a natural part of our food chain, they have  quite a negative impact on our environment.

  • So the Scottish wildcat is critically  endangered, while the domestic cat can act  

  • as an invasive species, threatening wildlife  in Scotland as well as many other places.

  • They really have conquered the  worldso how did this happen?  

  • Let’s take step back into evolutionary history  

  • and find out what drew wildcats to hang  out with us humans in the first place.

  • Will we find evidence of mummified  chewed up shoelaces?!  

  • The wild ancestors of almost all domestic  cats is the wild cat from Southwest Asia,  

  • and Northern Africa. It’s a  solitary animal - they hunt rodents,  

  • they hunt snakes, they hunt scorpions, naturally.

  • Dr Eva-Maria Geigl is a Research  Director of the CNRS in Paris, studying 

  • ancient DNA to investigate cats’  evolution and domestication.  

  • Before the dawn of the Neolithicwhich was when humans started farming,  

  • each subspecies of wildcats, was very  localised to their own part of the world.  

  • For example, Europe had the ancestors  of the Scottish wildcats weve just met.

  • But then, something changed. Dr Geigl picks up the  story when these early farmers went on the move.

  • Around 8000 years ago, when Neolithic farmers  migrated out of what is nowadays, Turkey,  

  • so Anatolia, in archaeological sites that testify  the presence of the first farmers from Anatolia  

  • that came into Europe, we found cat remains  that were not the type of the European Wildcat.  

  • So this indicated that these cats  came with the Neolithic farmers.  

  • One of the examples that is always cited is  the first archaeological finding on Cyprus,  

  • an island in the eastern Mediterranean that was  not inhabited by any feline species before the  

  • Neolithic. And at the beginning of the Neolithicarchaeologists have found a burial of a child,  

  • with a cat. Now we cannot say whether this cat  was a wild cat, or tamed cat, but we can say that  

  • this cat came with these first Neolithic farmers  because a cat will never swim to the island of  

  • Cyprus through the Mediterranean Sea. And this  means there was a special relationship between  

  • these cats and the first farmers. Now, how can we  imagine that this relationship was acquired? Well,  

  • we can imagine that the first farmers started  to accumulate grains. And of course, if you  

  • have an accumulation of seeds, grains, you will  attract rodents. But this also attracted cats,  

  • the wild cats that were living in the environment  around, and those cats who were the least afraid  

  • of the human presence, they would have run after  the rodents and really feast on these rodents.  

  • So the cats that were the least shy would have  started to just live with these early farmers who  

  • must have been delighted to have these cats around  killing rodents, they were killing snakes and  

  • scorpions. And this is how we imagine that this  relationship between cats and humans started.  

  • Cats were also crucial for humans  as they started to migrate overseas.  

  • They killed the rodents on board ships, thus  protecting the precious food stores, sails,  

  • even the wood of the ship itself. So where humans  travelled, so did catsthough if youve ever  

  • tried to get a cat near water you might suspect  they got them onboard in a rather coercive way.

  • But it was quite unlike the domestication of dogs,  

  • who were selected and bred for different tasksThe cats were just doing what came naturally.

  • So the cats were not particularly changed by  humans. There was no need. I always say cats were,  

  • from the very beginning, perfect for humansThey did exactly what humans wanted them to do.  

  • So there was no need to select any particular  character or trait of these cat. And there was no  

  • further change in the in the genomes. Exceptthe behaviour. Cats are solitary animals.  

  • And domestic cats are not as  solitary. They tolerate humans,  

  • more or less. And they tolerate other cats more  or less. So there must have been a change in the  

  • behaviour. They became less afraid of humansless shy. This is something we would like to see  

  • in the genome but behaviour is very complex, these  behavioural traits are encoded in multiple genes.  

  • And this is not very well known yet. EVA-Maria and her team are continuing to research  

  • the DNA of cats across time, to try and tease  out those changes associated with domestication.  

  • But it strikes me that those cats bold enough  to approach granaries thousands of years ago  

  • have ended up with an evolutionary advantage  over their wild counterparts. Instead of having  

  • to track down small creatures far and wide, they  now had the cat equivalent of a convenience store.

  • The wild cats have a disadvantage. I meanyou see already the numbers - there are  

  • 600 million cats in the world, and the wild  cat is on the edge of extinction. So of course,  

  • as any domestic animals, they are evolutionarily  winners. And then when you look at  

  • regions where no felines have lived naturallylike in Australia, like in New Zealand,  

  • and cats are brought into these environmentsthey thrive and they destroy endemic fauna.  

  • So they are really ferocious, invasive speciesThey succeed very well compared to wild cats.  

  • Is the ability to sidle up to humans maybe  just as much - or even more of a survival  

  • trick than those hunting instincts that  our listener’s cat Eva seems to be lacking?

  • Back with cat behaviourist Roger  Tabor, we see how that plays out,  

  • as we watch more of cat Scrumpy’s greatest hits.

  • This is some gardens overAnd this is not her house.

  • Okay, so I can see two houses, she's  walking down a path and is definitely  

  • getting closer to one of the houses. But look how she’s exploiting this.  

  • She’s just walked through a doorway. And  wait, you said that wasn't her house.  

  • Not her house. This is as the cat found itbecause there's no human being involved. So she's  

  • going into a total strangers house. Cat burglar!

  • And there is a food bowl over thereBut Scrumpy’s gone up taken a sniff..  

  • Realised there's no food  turned around very quickly.  

  • Absolutely. This is really very adventurous  stuff. Her owners had no idea that she moved far  

  • away from just going over the fence. But the fact  that she's going many gardens over and then going  

  • into other people's houses came as an absolute  revelation. So if you're looking at the survival  

  • of a cat in the big outside world, these are  sort of things that they can do only too easily.  

  • She does know how to hunt, but most of all  Scrumpy is a bold scavenger. Even though  

  • she’s very well fed and looked after in her  own home, these instincts are hardwired.  

  • A cat is a survivor. Even if you've got one that's  lived within your house, and you think it could  

  • only possibly live on the best gourmet food all  the time, and you tickling it and pampering it,  

  • believe me, at the end of the day, if your cat  can eat food from a saucer, it can survive by  

  • scavenging. Bottom line, it can scavenge. But  also it's got this other wonderful trick if  

  • it's been properly socialised, so it has become  more dependent on humans, what it will do is to  

  • go from garden to garden, house to house until it  finds somebody else who, the cat will entreaty,  

  • the voice will be there, it will be so plaintive  and, and we just are suckers. And if you are sort  

  • of cat-orientated person, that cat will findnew place. So that's part of its survival package.  

  • It's not just about hunting, exploiting  human beings is a great skill to have.  

  • And when you're in a human dense area, liketown surely that's the good way of surviving.

  • They've worked out they're onto  a good thing with us humans.  

  • Well, we're suckers aren’t we?!

  • This is all sounding hopeful for  our listener Rachel’s cat Eva,  

  • who, you might remember, doesn’t seem  like the world’s greatest hunter.  

  • So does Roger think she’d survive  on the mean streets all on her own?

  • My gut reaction, of course, is to say yes. All  cats are inherent survivors. If by chance she gets  

  • out. Because she's an indoor cat, she doesn't have  a map in her mind about what the local area is.  

  • So if something nasty happens while she's outsideso she runs around and runs and runs and gets into  

  • an area she's got no idea where she is, yes, that  could be a problem. And will she survive? Yes, she  

  • will survive because she will either do a little  bit of hunting, if she's got any of that in her,  

  • by the sounds of things she’s not very good at  hunting. Or much more significantly, and she will  

  • go and just scavenge. And if that scavenging  is sucking up to somebody and saying, miaow,  

  • that high pitched meow gets into us. So how can  we refuse, we're almost preconditioned to want  

  • to behave well. So if youve got somebody who  really loves cats and a cat comes up to you,  

  • Rachel's little Eva is going to survive.

  • Eva’s survival tool kit depends on her early  life, whether hunting, or scavenging, or winning  

  • humans over. But how well cats survive is also  going to be a question of their environment

  • Many cats do survive out on their own  – a study just released here in the UK  

  • estimated the stray and feral urban cat  population at a quarter of a million

  • So what about Japan, where  listener Rachel and her Eva live?  

  • How do stray cats fare there? Reporter Lucy Craft  visited a cat shelter in Tokyo to investigate… 

  • Youre curious. I see you yesDo you want some meaty stick?

  • Oh, oh there goes one guy, he's real climber huhThis is like a cat daycare centre. There's just  

  • like all kinds of things to climb up on. There's  toys, yes, you can go outside on the balcony.  

  • There's a cage right in front of me and there's  a cat happily napping away. There's another  

  • cat just wandering in and out of my legs down  here. Here's just a tail sticking out of this… 

  • I think this is timid one. No she’s got a great spot  

  • so she has no complaints... Somebody’s complaining. Hi

  • I'm Cheryl Nafthurst-Mori, been working  with Japan Cat Network for about 10 years,  

  • and manage our Tokyo logistics and shelter

  • I'm Susan Roberts, and I'm one of the  co founders for Japan Cat Network.  

  • We help people help stray and abandoned  cats in Japan since about the year 2000. 

  • So tell me what was the genesis  of your organisation, then

  • You know, it started with just  finding the situation intolerable,  

  • like finding kittens in parking lots and, and  not having a shelter to take any animals to

  • So Cheryl, tell me some of the cats that you  that you have here at the shelter. How did you  

  • find them? What were their situations? I would say our oldest kitties are two  

  • rescued from Fukushima, Rupert and Judy. They  were starving and left to fend for themselves.  

  • So we wanted to bring them into safetyThe 2011 nuclear disaster in Fukushima,  

  • triggered by a massive earthquake and tsunamiforced residents to evacuate quickly - and many  

  • had to leave their pets behind. So it  was a naturaltragic - experiment in  

  • catsability to survive by themselves. I think we were really shocked at how  

  • many starving animals we found. There's kind of  an impression that cats can fend for themselves.  

  • So a lot of people just set the cats free  thinking would only be for a short time.  

  • But it was for a long time. And some cats passed  away inside houses. And we found many doing badly

  • Of course, these were extreme conditions to  survive in – a disaster zone, suddenly emptied  

  • of humans, with food sources disappearing  overnight. But even here in Tokyo, Susan  

  • says life wouldn’t be easy for a cat who strayed. I don't think they would be able to survive well,  

  • that's not our experience. When we see  cats who are living on the streets,  

  • without care, trying to survive on their ownthey are not surviving well. They would have to  

  • be lucky enough to find a food source. They're not  going to be able to hunt enough, on the streets,  

  • to survive just from hunting. It would depend also  were they spayed or neutered, because being spayed  

  • or neutered makes a huge difference as well. Why is that

  • Because they have to use resources for  reproduction. And they have to fight  

  • and defend their territory. So they havemuch shorter lifespan without spay neuter

  • I live in Tokyo. I see the hazards facing a cat –  there’s traffic, disease, fights with other cats.  

  • I’ve even seen a kitten taken out by a crow. There  are a lot of street catsso many do survive.  

  • But the sheer number of cats is an issue toobecause it leads to conflict with humans

  • So youve got all these cats on the streetAnd that irritates people. They're noisy,  

  • they're smelly, they're fighting. And so then  people kind of take matters into their own hands

  • I don't know if this is just my neighbourhood.  I live not too far away from here. But whenever  

  • I walk around the neighbourhood, I  always see one or two stray cats.  

  • And I've seen particularly elderly women going  out opening up cans of tuna - are people just  

  • accustomed to cats being wild on the streets? You generally have somebody who feels sad about  

  • the cats in every community. So the question  is, what are they doing about it? People  

  • who are feeding cats are not necessarily spaying  or neutering them. None of us wants this many  

  • cats on the street. But the way to reduce them  is through trap neuter return. Catching cats,  

  • spaying and neutering them, and putting them back. Now, not everyone agrees with Trap Neuter Return:  

  • putting neutered cats back on the  streets, instead rehoming or killing them,  

  • means they still pose some risk to wildlife. But it’s widely accepted as a humane way  

  • to improve street catslives and keep their  populations down. In Tokyo official Community Cat  

  • Programmes have been set up where the local cats  are spayed or neutered, and residents provide for  

  • their basic needs. Research from Teikyo University  has found evidence this does benefit cat welfare

  • So - maybe it’s getting a little easier for  street cats here. But life is still probably  

  • going to be more comfortable in a home. So if  your cat does stray, Susan has some advice

  • We hand out a lot of tips because we get  contacted a lot. Maybe they made a mistake,  

  • the door wasn't quite closed. I think a lot  of people don't understand that cats can open  

  • screens, they can open windows, or they let  them out on the balcony, and they go over. So  

  • the most important thing is look for that catCats get trapped in outbuildings, you've got to  

  • talk to people in the neighbourhood, put  up posters, you have to call rescues.  

  • They're not going to be out in the openso they always hide. So if I looked around,  

  • I'd look for maybe a building that had a little  crawlspace, I'd look under cars. A lot of times,  

  • if you go out late at night, and you start  calling quietly, sometimes they'll come out.  

  • You can often find a cat that's gotten away. Good advice there thanks to Susan and Cheryl  

  • of Japan Cat Network and reporter Lucy CraftReturning to our listener Rachel’s question,  

  • if she did decide to put Eva out on  the streetsand I’m pleased she has  

  • no plans to do soshe’d face all sorts of  hazards, but she’d have a chance of survival.  

  • And from what I’ve seen and heard of her,  I think it would be her beguiling eyes  

  • and plaintiff miaow that would win the day. Get a little bit more exciting here

  • The tempos up, the paw’s out. Ah.. What a cat

  • Do you think she would survive if she if she  was for some reason back outside in the wild

  • Initially, it might be pretty hard for her.  

  • But I bet she could survive... somehow Optimism, I like it. And that happens  

  • to be the subject of next week’s CrowdScience as  Marnie Chesterton pits optimism against pessimism,  

  • but to end this show, let’s go back  to Racheland Eva - for the credits

  • That's all for this episode of crowd  science from the BBC World Service.  

  • Today's question was from me, Rachel  in Japan with a little help from my pet  

  • cat Eva. The show was presented by Melanie  brown and produced by Cathy Edwards. If you  

  • have a question you want answered please email  crowdscience@bbc.co.uk Thanks for listening Bye.

Hey Eva come on over here want me  to brush you? Hey sweet kitty…. 

字幕與單字

單字即點即查 點擊單字可以查詢單字解釋

B1 中級 美國腔

貓(Would my cat survive in the wild? - CrowdScience, BBC World Service)

  • 9 2
    王杰 發佈於 2022 年 05 月 22 日
影片單字