Rachel Grant photograph

Rachel Grant

Use attributes for filter !
Gender Female
Age 46
Web site rachelgrant.com
Date of birth September 25,1977
Zodiac sign Libra
Born Paranaque
Philippines
Parents Michael Grant, 12th Baron de Longueuil
Isabel Padua
Siblings David Alexander
Angela Grant
Rebecca Grant
Great-grandparents Ernestine Bowes-Lyon
Ronald Charles Grant, 10th Baron de Longueuil
Grandparents Raymond Grant, 11th Baron de Longueuil
Height 169 (cm)
Job Actor
Model
Writer
Social entrepreneur
Official site rachelgrant.com
SpousStephen Hersh ​​
Great grandparent Ernestine Bowes-Lyon
Ronald Charles Grant, 10th Baron de Longueuil
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID515213

Cold Evidence
Feel the Heat: Steamy Romantic Suspense from 10 Bestselling Authors
Concrete Evidence
Wet 'n Wild Navy SEALs
Beyond Surviving: The Final Stage in Recovery from Sexual Abuse
Midnight Sun
Covert Evidence
It's Just My Personality: Exploring and Explaining Myers-Briggs Personality Types
Tinderbox
Witholding Evidence
Poison Evidence
Withholding Evidence
Catalyst
Silent Evidence
Firestorm
Wishes
Grave Danger
Body of Evidence
Send edit request

Rachel Grant Life story


Rachel Louise Grant de Longueuil is an English actress and TV presenter.

Why did a dog in Newmarket end up nursing a litter of kittens?

Nov 7,2023 9:01 pm

By Laurence CawleyBBC News, Suffolk

Hours after Sue Stubley brought home six abandoned kittens, something peculiar happened - Her dog began lactating and the hungry kittens latched on to feed. Cute? Certainly. But why would a dog want to nurture a kitten and how common is inter-species nursing and adoption?

The original plan was to look after the kittens for One Night and take them to a local cat rescue The Next morning.

Teasel,

" My dog decided that she was going to look after them, " says Ms Stubley, who lives in the Suffolk town of Newmarket. " She was cleaning them, and within a few hours, was making milk.

" She stays cuddled up to them All Night . "

Teasel's maternal instincts do not stop with feeding and cuddling Her kitten-pups.

" If anybody comes in who she doesn't know and the kittens have gone astray, she'll pick them up and put them back into bed, " says Ms Stubley.

Such upending of the stereotypical canine-feline relationship is far from unheard of.

In Liverpool, for example, a shih-tzu puppy named Hope, which was rejected by its mother, whose kittens were born on the same day.

Of course, it is not just cats and dogs that occasionally adopt each another's young.

In 2016 took on an additional labour of Love - Becoming a " mother" to two rescued baby squirrels.

Then, in 2017, eight orphaned hedgehogs in The Russian city of Vladivostok were saved when their mother died in a lawnmowing accident.

And (the two species are typically mortal enemies) under their wings in 2017 and raised it along with their own three chicks in The Nest .

So What is going on?

Biologist Dr Rachel Grant , at London South Bank University, says such interspecies " adoptions" are likely the result of " fixed action patterns" in which the adopting animal is responding to a " certain trigger" from the adoptee.

" This sets off a cascade in The Brain that elicits a pattern of behaviour, " says Dr Grant.

Baby birds, for example, will see the red area on the mother's beak and peck at it. The mother returns the gesture by responding to the red area of The Baby birds' gaping mouths.

" It is a signal, " says Dr Grant.

A signal, it turns out, that can be manipulated. Cuckoos, for example, exploit these " fixed action patterns" Baby cuckoos tend to The The largest red mouths in The Brood , meaning they are well taken care of.

Dr Grant says The Closer species are to one another, the more likely a cross-species adoption will take place, meaning it is very unlikely you will ever read about a crocodile nursing a chihuahua puppy.

" In baby mammals there will be certain features that mammals share with other mammals, " Dr Grant says.

" Cats and dogs, for example, are both mammals and the cues which are driving maternal behaviour are very similar. They will be responding to certain cues. "

As for the young, they too are acting on instinct. So the kittens in the case of Teasel are instinctively " rooting" - just like human babies or Puppies - for a nipple to feed on.

" These things are not under conscious control, " says Dr Grant.

While cross-species nursing might be deeply endearing and eminently shareable on Social Media , it surely runs counter to our understanding of evolution.

Yes and no, according to Dr Grant.

" As long as it works 99% of The Time it will be selected by evolution, " she says.

So The Strong maternal instinct shown by Teasel stands Her in good stead to raise Her own young, should she One Day have pups of Her own.

That those instincts have been co-opted by a litter of needy kittens works out well for the kittens - and does not harm Teasel.

What would be interesting, according to Dr Grant, was what would have happened if Teasel already had a full litter of Her own pups.

It is, perhaps, far less likely Teasel would have been quite as maternal towards them.

What does The Future hold for Teasel and Her kittens?

" I think once weening has occurred, The Bond is likely to lessen off, " says Dr Grant.

Which is just as well, because all of the kittens have new families lined up to give them homes.

Related Topics

Source of news: bbc.com

Rachel Grant Photos

Related Persons

Next Profile ❯