There were a couple books I read long ago, one of which I think was "Catwatching" by Desmond Morris. I can't recall the other one. Both books indicated the chittering was a frustration sound.
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Oh that's interesting. I gotta look them up. I can definitely imagine frustration being a part of it but Idk if that's all there's to it. I mean this is highly anecdotal and subjective but my cat just seems excited more than frustrated when I'm next to her. Maybe they find joy in sharing the frustration π
Morris described the situation as frustration as in not being able to reach the pray as if saying "Ah heck" but there is no evidence to back up any of this anyway, pure speculation/imagination
Edit: still good book tho
I assumed it was communication between cats. Mine do it to eachother, usually when they get home. Sometimes they do it to me as well. They also do it if they see something out of the window though.
I'm unsure as to why or how, but my cat has different chitters for each type of bird or creature that he's watching. The volume is also dependent on the size of the creature, so sparrows get a decently quiet "ch-ch-ch" sounds, while crows get a louder more crow-like "cha" sound.
The morning that he was making really loud unusual chirping was the morning that there was a set of vultures on the neighbors roof that he was watching.
Usually, though, I can reasonably identify the bird even if I'm in a different room.
Interestng theory. Chittering is also in ultrasound, so it could well be a sort of hunting call to fellow cats. However cats aren't exactly social hunters. Also, it's anecdotal, but due to the fact that mine sometimes just sits in a room and chitters at me ( sitting in another room ) while fixating me with its look when bored has me leaning towards the frustration hypothesis.
I thought I had read something about this, but I can't find a source, so take this with some salt.
Even big cats chitter, and while sometimes there's a social aspect where other cats are alerted to the hunt, not all big cats hunt in groups. So I think they chitter to warm their jaws up. Like streatching before exercising, or the jitters you get from adrenaline, the rapid movements ensure they can bite at maximum strength quickly, and without pulling a muscle.
If cats were allistic, theyβd be dogs