Personal grooming
Personal grooming, also called titivating and preening, is the art of cleaning and grooming parts of the body.
In humans
[change | change source]Grooming in humans is usually done in the bathroom, for the hair. Things such as washing and cleaning the hair, combing it and taking out the tangles, and styling. It can also include shaving, done by a man to cut his beard short. However, sometimes the beard can be groomed as well, and washed and grown.
In animals
[change | change source]Animals usually clean their fur, feathers or other skin coverings. This is also a form of hygiene. Taking out other objects such as insects, leaves, dirt or twigs, are all forms of grooming. Among animals, birds spend a lot of time preening their feathers. They do this to remove ectoparasites, keep them in good condition, and waterproof them. Felidae cats are well known for their grooming, which they usually do by licking themselves. One of the reasons this is done is to remove all the scent on them so that they will not attract any predators. Cats groom so much that they often produce hairballs from the fur they accidentally swallow.
Mutual grooming
[change | change source]In humans, mutual grooming is done to become more close to each other emotionally.[1][2]
Gallery
[change | change source]-
A domesticated tortoiseshell cat grooming herself.
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A domesticated cat grooming.
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Black swan preening.
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Blue Ducks preening their feathers.
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Peregrine Falcon preening its feathers.
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A House Sparrow cleans herself in moving water while a Mallard preens in the background
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A flesh fly uses its legs to clean and maintain itself
Related pages
[change | change source]References
[change | change source]- ↑ Casse, Pierre. (2008-10-14) Social Grooming – A new side to leadership? Archived 2016-03-12 at the Wayback Machine Dean, Berlin School of Creative Leadership. Retrieved on 2010-09-08
- ↑ Nelson, Holly and Geher, Glenn. (2007-09-15) Mutual Grooming in Human Dyadic Relationships: An Ethological Perspective[permanent dead link] Springer Link. Retrieved on 2010-09-08