T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
64.1 | | JUPITR::KAGNO | Kitties with an Attitude | Mon Dec 09 1991 12:29 | 27 |
| I'll start.
Tabby describes the coat pattern; stripes. Seal is a color (dark
brown). Sealpoint means the dark brown color is confined to the outer
extremities (ears, legs, feet, tail...).
Tabby is not a breed in itself and the striped pattern applies to many
different breeds such as the Maine Coon, Norwegian Forest Cat, American
Shorthair, Scottish Fold, to name a few. In addition, there are 3
different tabby patterns: Classic (bulls-eyes and bracelets); mackerel
(straight stripes) and spotted. The tabby pattern can also be confined
to the points. These are called lynxpoints. For example, a seal
lynxpoint pattern would be dark brown tabby stripes on the outer
extremities of the body. Many garden variety cats (mutt cats) display
the tabby pattern.
Other colors are blue (grey), chocolate, lilac, red, flame, and cream.
These colors can also be found in the pointed varieties of cats.
Cats that come in pointed patterns are Siamese, Himalayan, Birmans,
Ragdolls, and Javanese to name a few.
This is just a quick reply to .1. I'm sure others can even further
elaborate on it.
-Roberta
|
64.2 | a sampler of pointed breeds | MUTTON::BROWN | | Mon Dec 09 1991 13:08 | 27 |
| Himalyan = division of the Persian breed, comes in the traditional
colors (seal point, blue point, chocolate point, and lilac
point) plus red point, tortie point, blue cream point,
cream point, and all colors of lynx point.
Siamese = only comes in 4 traditional colors
Colorpoint Shorthair = same body style as siamese, but comes in the
colors other than the 4 traditional (for
example, red point, tortie point, lynx point)
Balinese = longhaired siamese, but only comes in the 4 traditional
colors
Javanese = same body style as the Balinese but comes in the
non-traditional color points
Birman = longhaired cat with white feet, color points. CFA recognizes
them only in the 4 traditional colors. TICA recognizes all
traditional and non-traditional colors.
Ragdoll = longhaired cat, sometimes color pointed, sometimes bi-color,
sometimes color pointed with white feet. Comes in
traditional color points. Not recognized in CFA.
Jo
|
64.3 | | RIPPLE::KENNEDY_KA | Let Go for the Moment | Mon Dec 09 1991 17:30 | 7 |
| re .2
Jo, did I miss something? I have both a seal tortie and red point
"siamese". I have always considered them Siamese. Does CFA call them
colorpoint shorthair? They are registered as Siamese in ACFA and TICA.
Karen-who-has-been-away-from-breeding-and-shows-for-several-years-and-feels-
stupid-asking-this-question
|
64.4 | Fun times in CFA color classes! | MUTTON::BROWN | | Mon Dec 09 1991 17:42 | 26 |
| You didn't miss anything, CFA doesn't call seal tortie or red points
Siamese, they call them Colorpoint Shorthairs. TICA and ACFA call them
Siamese. Same cats, different colors, different names. They did it this
way because not all breeders wanted to work with those colors, and by
keeping them as a separate gene pool, there was no worry about having
one of the non-traditional colors or patterns pop up in a litter. Siamese
and Colorpoints can be bred together, but the resulting litter will be
called Colorpoints. I think that they go so far as to say that any solid
point offspring (traditional colors) have to be registered as "variants"
not as Siamese.
Same is true of Balinese and Javanese. Those breeders can breed to
Siamese to bring in type, but any shorthaired offspring have to be
registered as Balinese variants or Javanese variants rather than
Siamese.
I think they just wanted to keep the rest of the fancy on their toes!
;')
Jo
PS - In CFA we call them "flame points" if they are Himmies and "red
points" if they are Colorpoint Shorthairs! What a hoot! 8'D
|
64.5 | | RIPPLE::KENNEDY_KA | Let Go for the Moment | Mon Dec 09 1991 17:46 | 4 |
| Thanks Jo! :-) In my heart and mind they are true Siamese, regardless
of what the associations say.
Karen
|
64.6 | | COASTL::NDC | Putiput Scottish Folds DTN:297-2313 | Tue Dec 10 1991 05:15 | 19 |
| I'll add my 2 cents.
I was told that the definition of a calico is as follows:
A cat that is mostly white with islands of red and black that are
2 inches or less in diameter and that DO NOT TOUCH. If they touch
the cat is considered a tortie and white. The dilute versions
of this would be blue and cream (grey and beige).
Tortoishell - a red and black cat. The red and black can look like
brush strokes or can be large islands of color. Tortie is short
for tortoishell.
Torbie - this word is a combination of tabby + tortie. It refers
to a tortoishell cat with tabby markings. Another name for a torbie
is a "patched tabby". These are cats that are silver OR brown tabbies
with patches of red tabby.
|
64.7 | a patch of blue | SANFAN::BALZERMA | | Tue Dec 10 1991 08:55 | 5 |
|
Re: .6 Don't forget blue patched tabbies...
|
64.8 | Thanks for all the info! | AUKLET::MEIER | Hey, furball, who pays the mortgage here? | Tue Dec 10 1991 09:11 | 11 |
| You guys are great! Now all we need is a way to include sample pictures with
the descriptions. :-) I think I'll bring a printout home, and read it with
some of my cat books beside me (which I buy mostly for the pictures :-)). I
guess that's the next best thing!
My next question is: it sounds like I'm correct referring to my grey/black
tiger kittens as tabby, though "tiger" might be more descriptive to indicate
the stripes are straight, although it isn't one of the "choices" of tabby.
Is this right?
Jill
|
64.9 | Definitions of color vary by association | MUTTON::BROWN | | Tue Dec 10 1991 09:15 | 37 |
| In CFA, a cat that is white with large defined areas of black and red
is a calico. The black and red can touch and the cat will still be a
calico. A white cat with defined areas of blue and cream would be
called a dilute calico.
A tortoiseshell is a cat that is black and orange but does not have
defined areas of black and orange. The colors are co-mingled. A
tortoiseshell does not have white on it. The dilute version of a
tortoisehell is called a blue-cream.
In CFA, a tortie Persian would compete in the Parti-color class, while
a calico Persian would compete in the Bi-color class.
To throw another definition at you, a Van is a cat that is white, with
other colors allowed only on the extremities (head, legs, tail) and
with only two spots of color on the body. Vans can be bi-colored
(black and white, blue and white, red and white) or be van calico or
dilute van calico (white cat with black and orange on the legs, head,
tail and two spots on the body). The Japanese Bobtail color of Mike is
a Van Calico pattern.
Mike - pronounced meekay, the name of a color pattern in Japanese
Bobtails that describes a cat of the Van Calico pattern.
CFA doesn't recognize Torbies. Those female cats that are brown tabby
with patches of red, or silver tabby with patches of cream are called
Patched Tabby.
By the way, Mike, Calico, Tortoiseshell, Patched Tabby, Blue-cream, and
Dilute Calico, any combination of either red and black, or cream and
blue, or brown tabby with red, or silver tabby with cream all have to
be female. Genetically these genes are sex-linked and will show
themselves only in females (there have been rare exceptions, but
usually those males that end up with these colors are sterile).
Jo
|
64.10 | | WILLEE::MERRITT | | Tue Dec 10 1991 09:21 | 7 |
| I'm like Jill..this note is great...but there are so many
colors and types...I find it hard to determine what my cats
are. So Jill...if your lucky you work near someone like
Roberta Kagno...who I use as my expert to help identify the
different colors/types by showing her pictures.
Sandy
|
64.11 | | MUTTON::BROWN | | Tue Dec 10 1991 09:29 | 6 |
| Jill, if your kittens are tabbies with stripes, then they are called
Mackerel Tabbies. :')
Enter your cats descriptions here and we will give it our best shots.
Jo
|
64.12 | | JUPITR::KAGNO | Kitties with an Attitude | Tue Dec 10 1991 11:45 | 5 |
| Blush! Why thank you, Sandy. What a nice thing to say. :^)
Maybe we should start another picture swap for those folks who would
like to learn more about the various colors and patterns of cats.
|
64.13 | ? | MTWAIN::JONES | | Wed Dec 11 1991 07:53 | 10 |
| My aunt had a siamese that had speckles on her nose - they were kind of
liver/blue/brown colored and I was always told she was a tortoise shell
siamese. - She was beautiful.
But what was she really, since the descriptions in here say that a
tortie point is red and black or orange and black?
It's much easier to tell with dogs.
helen-who-is-only-now-becoming-a-cat-person (and likes it!)
|
64.14 | But WE call her coloring "dustbunny" | CIVIC::FAHEL | Amalthea Celebras/Silver Unicorn | Wed Dec 11 1991 10:18 | 15 |
| OK, I need to have my little Alexandra "defined".
She is grey (or tan - depending on the phase of the moon), with dark
grey stripes. There are some dark grey spots between the stripes. She
has white only around her eyes and mouth (no "bib" or "socks") and
under her tail and her belly (and the stripes go ALL the way around
her). And she has a very big, very dark "M" on her forehead.
I've been told that this is "Tiger", but also "Tabby". Help!
Also, one to add to the color list - Sable. Sable is a dark, dark, dark,
dark, dark, almost-but-not-quite-black brown. Darker than chocolate.
(I got this one from a book - my Rico is a sable Burmese).
K.C.
|
64.15 | Giving it a shot | MUTTON::BROWN | | Wed Dec 11 1991 10:51 | 18 |
| re: .13
In the cat fancy, grey is called blue, and brown is called either
chocolate or seal, depending on the type of cat (Havana's are
chocolate, but brown legs on a pointed cat can either be seal (most
likely) or chocolate (which is a dilute color and more rare).
Okay, on siamese, if the cat is a tortie, it can be either chocolate
tortie (chocolate points with cream flecks in it), or seal tortie (seal
points with darker cream flecks in it (where the darker cream == red).
I am not sure what color you mean by liver. And, generally, blue and
seal won't be found on the same cat since blue is the dilute of seal.
Did the cat exhibit any tabby markings on the points?
This is really hard to do without pictures. :')
Jo
|
64.16 | giving it another try | MUTTON::BROWN | | Wed Dec 11 1991 11:11 | 21 |
| re: .14
Okay, Alexandra...What color are her eyes, and what color is the fur on
the bottoms of her feet? She is probably a mackerel tabby (hence the M
on the forehead, stripes, white around the eyes, etc). My first guess
would be a blue tabby. If her eyes are green though, and her fur on
the bottoms of her feet is black, and/or her nose leather is redish
brick color, then she is probably a silver tabby.
Blue cats will have copper or gold eyes and their ground color (the
color under the pattern or stripes) will be tan. Silver cats will have
green eyes, black outlined noses and eyelids, and black fur on the bottoms of
their feet.
Also, sable is the same color as seal, but it is called Sable in
the Burmese breed where the whole cat is that color. In pointed cats,
the seal coloring (or whatever color the points are) is restricted to
the points.
Jo
|
64.17 | liver spots | MTWAIN::JONES | | Wed Dec 11 1991 11:26 | 17 |
| re: 15
Elsa was a cream color all over, yet with bluish and tannish and dark
brown spots on her nose. The spots were very small, giving the
impression that someone had dripped a paintbrush on her.
It's hard to remember exactly. She passed on a few years ago and
I've always wanted a cat that looked like her.
I guess I'm calling tan "liver" since one of my dogs is called
"liver" and she's brown. (Well, she's CALLED Ding, but she's
DESCRIBED as liver.) :^)
I guess I'm just passing on confusion. Sorry.
helen
|
64.18 | | MUTTON::BROWN | | Wed Dec 11 1991 11:32 | 8 |
| So the only places that she had color were on her face? Not on her
legs? Cream body all over with no color on her legs or tail or ears?
Sounds very interesting but without a picture I would be hard pressed
to figure this one out. :') Without the color on her other points, she
wouldn't be displaying the normal pointed pattern for a siamese.
Jo
|
64.19 | More on little Alex-Lynn | SELL3::FAHEL | Amalthea Celebras/Silver Unicorn | Wed Dec 11 1991 12:02 | 9 |
| Re: .16 re: .14
Her eyes are the exact color of her "base" fur (meaning grey or
grey-tan, depending on...) Her nose matches her stripes, and her foot
fur is the same color as her "base" fur.
What is the difference between a mackerel tabby and a blue tabby?
K.C.
|
64.20 | | MUTTON::BROWN | | Wed Dec 11 1991 12:05 | 8 |
| Blue is a color. Mackerel is a pattern. So, she could be a blue
mackerel tabby.
So, she has grey eyes?? Take a look at them tonight when you get home
and then tell me again tomorrow. I suspect that they are
copper/gold/yellow.
Jo
|
64.21 | | COASTL::NDC | Putiput Scottish Folds DTN:297-2313 | Thu Dec 12 1991 05:26 | 7 |
| My tabbies all have M's on their foreheads and they are very obviously
Classic tabbies.
Nancy
p.s. If Alexandra is a kitten then she probably doesn't have her
eye color yet.
|
64.22 | Okay, how 'bout this one? | SELECT::FEASE | Andrea Midtmoen Fease | Thu Dec 12 1991 05:40 | 7 |
| Bigfoot is definitely a Mackeral tabby. However, I don't know
what color. His stripes are black. His background (?) is ticked with
bands of black, dark brown, light brown and a dash of silver.
So what color is he??
- Andrea
|
64.23 | Here's a clear picture of the princess | CIVIC::FAHEL | Amalthea Celebras/Silver Unicorn | Thu Dec 12 1991 05:45 | 19 |
| I very carefully studied little Alex last night (usually she loves to
be cuddled, but since I was trying to get the best description
possible, of COURSE she would be uncooperative).
Her fur is grey, with itsy bitsy bits of light brown near the neck and
paws (hardly noticeable, unless she's right in the light). Her stripes
are very, very dark grey - almost black, as is the fur on the bottoms
of her feet, her nose, her pads, and her "M". She also has dark "eye
liner" (she's too YOUNG for makeup! ;^) ). She has white around her
eyeliner, under her belly, her tail, and her chin - no bib. And Nancy's
right...her eyes haven't decided what color they're going to be (My heart
broke when they started to change from the lovely shade of lavender that
they were when we first got her). Right now they are fighting between
grey, gold and green. She is ALMOST 5 months old.
And we've decided that the "M" stands for "Monster" - she rears up with
her arms out in what we call a "monster pose". ;^)
K.C.
|
64.24 | Experts please reply!! | AIMHI::UPTON | | Thu Dec 12 1991 09:45 | 25 |
|
Another quiz....can you tell me what my Siamese is called?
She is almost white, but alittle to the cream coloring on most of
her body. She has a dark brown face - but not all of her face is
brown just her nose and around her eyes. What I'm, trying to say
is that her cheeks(face) are cream color like her body. Her
front and back legs are chocolate as is her tail and ears. She is
a little darker around her hips. Her eyes are real blue. Her
mother was a sealpoint - never meet her "dad", but he was suppose
to be a Siamese too. When she was a baby - she had only a real
dark chocolate nose/ears/feet and she was almost white in color.
She has darkened as she has got older. She has a pointed face and her
ears seems to be taller than my other Siamese who has a much
rounder face and all of her face is chocolate.
People who see her for the first time always remark how beautiful
she is (of course), but they also remark how soft her fur is. I
never owned a cat with such silky fur. My other Siamese has nice
fur but not early as silky as Ashley. (FYI She's shorthaired).
All guess are welcomed and appreciated.
-dee
|
64.25 | Alex a silver tabby? | MUTTON::BROWN | | Thu Dec 12 1991 09:56 | 12 |
| re: .21 Nancy, I didn't mean to lead folks to think that only Mackerel
tabbies have M's on their foreheads. All tabbies have M's on their
foreheads.
re:.23
Going from your further description of her color, her age, and her eye
color, I am going out on a limb and calling her a silver mackerel
tabby. But, disclaimer, we did this from color descriptions not
pictures so we could be wrong. :')
Jo
|
64.26 | an answer for Dee | MUTTON::BROWN | | Thu Dec 12 1991 10:02 | 20 |
| re: .24
Your girl *may* be a chocolate. That is a dilute color and less
common, but the mask on a dilute is never as complete as with seals or
blues. The dilutes usually have a T mask (I know, weird name for it).
Anyway, the color usually concentrates on the nose and around the eyes
and gets much fainter on the cheeks.
She may also be a seal point with poor cheek color. It depends on the
tone of her points. Seal is a very rich, deep, brown color, almost
black. Chocolate is the tone of milk chocolate, with a pinkish cast.
Since point color is subject to environmental changes, so you have to
tell us if she has always had the lack of color on her cheeks or if
this is something new. Point color can get "ticking" in it, that is,
white or light hairs in the points due to environmental changes or
illness. The ticking throws off some people. Ticking does go away
though and the cats mask goes back to normal.
Jo
|
64.27 | The chocolate controversy | JUPITR::KAGNO | Kitties with an Attitude | Thu Dec 12 1991 12:34 | 28 |
| Dee,
Maybe I can help, as I have both a sealpoint Ragdoll cat and chocolate
point Siamese cross.
Jo is right. The chocolate is a warm, milk chocolate, like the
color of a Hershey bar. Taja's body is ivory, with subtle chocolate
shading across the back and haunches. The point color on his face is
darker around the eyes and outside of the face than it is on the
whisker pads. The tip of his nose is brick red (sometimes called burnt
rose). This color nose leather is usually indicative of a true
chocolate point, although it is hard to capture in pictures. The light
has to be just right.
Kelsey, my seal point, has very dark, almost black point color and his
facial mask is complete. There are no broken areas of cream. (Some
seals do have separate areas of color on the face and are sometimes
mistaken for chocolates for this reason.) When in doubt in determining
if the cat is seal or chocolate, look at the paw pads. A sealpoint
will have dark brown paw pads like the point color. A chocolate will
have brick red paw pads to match the nose leather.
If you'd like, I can send you some pictures of Kelsey and Taja so you
can see the differences in color.
--Roberta (who feels fortunate to own a chocolate point! Taja is a
strikingly beautiful cat. Thanks JJ and Barbara!!)
|
64.28 | | JUPITR::KAGNO | Kitties with an Attitude | Thu Dec 12 1991 12:40 | 7 |
| One more elaboration on chocolate/seal:
The body color of a chocolate is ivory/white with subtle shadings where the
sealpoint is creamy white (like coffee with a lot of cream in it) with
more prominent shading. Kelsey is a very dark sealpoint, but your
mileage does vary.
|
64.29 | | MUTTON::BROWN | | Thu Dec 12 1991 13:21 | 11 |
| I have found body color to vary so much with different lines within a
breed or even within a color division, that I don't even try to describe
it anymore.
The body color can range from creamy white to a color just slightly
lighter than the point color. In my breed, as long as there is
definition between the point color and the body color, either way is
okay. Most pet buyers tell me that they want a Birman that will stay
white, but I prefer the coat color once the body has shaded.
Jo
|
64.30 | When are the changes complete? | CIVIC::FAHEL | Amalthea Celebras/Silver Unicorn | Thu Dec 12 1991 13:26 | 4 |
| Out of curiosity, about how much longer do we wait 'til Alex is fully
"marked"?
K.C.
|
64.31 | depends on the color | MUTTON::BROWN | | Thu Dec 12 1991 13:56 | 21 |
| With the exceptions of cats with points, and solid white cats, cats
color and pattern should be fully visible at birth and shouldn't really
change. The color may intensify, but not change with age.
Cats of the pointed variety are born white and will start developing
point color within hours of birth. The complete points will be visible
to some degree by the time they are 3-4 months old (with a few
exceptions).
Solid white cats will often have a "smudge" of color on their
foreheads. This bit of color tells you what color the cat would have
been if the white hadn't masked it. It also tells you what color the
cat is genetically, in the case of breeding cats. That smudge of color
will disappear, usually when the cat is between 8-12 months old.
All cats are born with blue eyes. At about 6-8 weeks the eye color
begins changing. Usually by 4 months the adult eye color will be in,
but it can continue to intensify with age. It shouldn't change though,
just deepen.
Jo
|
64.32 | | SELECT::FEASE | Andrea Midtmoen Fease | Fri Dec 13 1991 05:37 | 6 |
| Re. .22:
When I mean Bigfoot's fur is ticked, I mean that each individual
hair has bands of black, dark brown, light brown and sometimes silver.
Still waiting for a color determination ... ;-) ...
|
64.33 | Calicos, torties, and moustaches | VMSMKT::THOMPSON | Kate Comiskey Thompson | Fri Dec 13 1991 06:52 | 15 |
| Based on what I learned in this note, I informed Poppy last night
that she's not calico, as we've been telling her, but tortie-and-
white. She gave me that silly head tilt that cats give, meowed,
and went to the basement to think about it.
I have a question. I read in a book that it's very characteristic
of calicos and torties to have orange- or ginger-colored ears, which
Poppy does. Is it also common for them to have "moustaches?" Many of
them seem to. Poppy does (even the skin on her nose is black),
and 3 of my sister's 4 do.
Just curious.
kate
|
64.34 | calicos and stuff | WR2FOR::CORDESBRO_JO | set home/cat_max=infinity | Fri Dec 13 1991 11:03 | 9 |
| Re: .33
It sometimes happens that torties and calico's will have orange on
their face or ears, but I wouldn't say that it is characteristic or
expected. The color will fall where it will fall. That is what is so
fun about bi-colors, and calicos and torties. You can never predict
how their pattern will come out.
Jo
|
64.35 | Doing my best on these | WR2FOR::CORDESBRO_JO | set home/cat_max=infinity | Fri Dec 13 1991 11:16 | 16 |
| re: .32
Does Bigfoot show any tabby pattern on his body at all? Does he has
any tabby markings on his legs or tail or face?
The individual bands of color on each hair describe the ticked tabby
pattern. The ticked tabby pattern is the one that you seen on
Abyssinians. Each hair has several bands of color on it.
Generally, I haven't seen too many cats that have the combination of
black, brown, and silver. Again, it is difficult to describe some of
these colors in words. But, from what you have given me, I would say
that Bigfoot is a ticked tabby (some people like to refer to them as
Aby tabby ;'})
Jo
|
64.36 | Similar to white and brown tabby | CGOOA::LMILLER | hasten slowly | Fri Dec 13 1991 12:08 | 8 |
| One of my cats sounds similar to BIGFOOT. Rosie is white with ticked
patches and black markings. She was classified in HHP as a classic brown
and white tabby (TICA) even though her tail is silver and black. She has
the M and stripes where she is not white. Her ticking is banded black,
brown and light brown, I think it's called agouti.
Linda
|
64.37 | "smoked vs shaded" is bound to come up soon! ;') | MUTTON::BROWN | | Fri Dec 13 1991 13:36 | 14 |
| If Rosie was classified at a TICA show as a classic tabby, then there
must have been enough of the bulleye's and swirls of the classic
pattern for them to tell that. If so, then she isn't a ticked tabby.
Classic tabby is quite distinctive and hard to miss.
The thing that you have to remember about the difference between ticked
tabby and other tabby patterns is that we are talking about a patterned
cat with a ground color. On a classic or mackerel tabby, some of the
hairs will have more than one color on them, that is what makes up the
pattern. On a ticked tabby, there must be at least three bands of
distinct color on each hair.
Jo
|
64.38 | Snoopy's tortie & white, I think | ASDG::ANDERSON | | Sat Dec 14 1991 07:23 | 14 |
| Snoopy is tortie and white, I guess. We always called her calico.
Most of her body is black and orange, big huge patches of each color
that have many shared boundaries. Her chin, chest, belly, and feet are
white with a few small patches of orange or black. Her head is mostly
black except for an orange spot on one ear and a white stripe on her
nose (what do you call the part of the face the whiskers grow from?
That's white, too.) The white stripe is bordered in orange; I don't
think she has white meeting black anywhere.
So if she didn't have the white, she'd be a tortie? And if she were
mostly white with the black and orange patches spread out, she'd be a
calico?
Lisa Dean and Snoopy (Doorstop cat)
|
64.39 | | ASGMKA::UPTON | | Mon Dec 16 1991 06:38 | 21 |
| reply to .26, .27 & .28
Thanks for your quick replies. Well I went home and checked out
Ashley. From your descriptions I think she's a chocolate. The
bottom of her paws are more brick red than chocolate. I put her
next to my Sealpoint Siamese and she is definitely lighter on
her points. When she was a baby, her nose looked like someone
smudged her with dirt - because everything on her was almost
white except her nose and feet and tail.
Re: Roberta
I'd love to see a picture of your Kelsey and Taja so I can see the
difference in color. I would alos like to send one of Ashley so
you can confirm if she really is a chocolate. I'll contact you
off line regarding logistics.
Thanks folks.
-dee
|
64.40 | Here's a better description | SELECT::FEASE | Andrea Midtmoen Fease | Mon Dec 16 1991 07:01 | 20 |
| Re. .35
Yes, indeed, Bigfoot does have tabby markings. So let me try to
describe him again (it's so hard with words ;-) ):
Black tabby stripes, mackeral tabby pattern. The hairs that make
up the stripes are all black, no ticking or banding.
Kind of a beige/tan color on his belly. Again, no ticking here.
The rest of him (his "background"?) : ticked hairs, each hair with
at least three bands of color. The colors can be any combination of
black, dark brown, light brown and silver (no two hairs alike ;-) ).
Does this sound like an Aby Tabby?
- Andrea
P.S. Do Aby Tabby's come with double paws? He's got 7 toes in front,
5 in back).
|
64.41 | Eye color | SELECT::FEASE | Andrea Midtmoen Fease | Mon Dec 16 1991 07:16 | 3 |
| Oh, yes, Bigfoot has green eyes too. One of the vets at the place
I use said that green eyes were unusual - usually they are copper. Is
this true?
|
64.42 | | JUPITR::KAGNO | Kitties with an Attitude | Mon Dec 16 1991 07:49 | 4 |
| Okay, Dee. We'll further our discussion in mail!
-Roberta
|
64.43 | | MUTTON::BROWN | | Mon Dec 16 1991 07:53 | 26 |
| re .40.
If Bigfoot shows any tabby pattern at all on his body, then he is not a
Aby tabby. An Aby tabby will have full ticking over the entire body,
no tabby pattern. But, they will have the rings on the legs and the
tabby markings on the face. From the sounds of it, I would say he was
a brown mackeral tabby from your color descriptions, but given his
green eyes, he is probably a silver tabby. The green eye color goes
along with the silver gene. If he were a brown tabby, he would have
gold or copper eyes.
re. the tortie and white of Lisa Dean's...
From the description you entered, I would say she is a calico, not a
tortie and white, but in another association she would probably be a
tortie and white.
Further clarification on the difference is that a calico is a white cat
with splotches of black and red on it (doesn't matter if they run
together, and it doesn't matter how much white, although it is prefered
that they have a white ring around the neck coming up from the chest).
A Tortie is a black cat with splotches of red and cream (no white).
CFA doesn't recognize Torbies.
Jo
|
64.44 | Thanks, Jo! | SELECT::FEASE | Andrea Midtmoen Fease | Mon Dec 16 1991 08:42 | 3 |
| Maybe he's a mutation between brown and silver; he only has a
little bit on silver on him, like a sprinkling of snow. Weird, but
handsome 8-) !
|
64.45 | money cats | ICS::WRIGHT | | Thu Dec 19 1991 06:32 | 12 |
|
Does anyone know what three colors a money
cat is supposed to be?. My mom says there
are two types of money cats with different
colors. She has a (tortie) orange, black and
white. Whats the name of the other type and what
color are they?
Thanks,
Liz
|
64.46 | | JUPITR::KAGNO | Kitties with an Attitude | Thu Dec 19 1991 07:53 | 13 |
| Hi Liz,
The other type of money cat is called a calico. I think that refers
to a coat that is primarily white with unbroken patches of black and
red (orange). The tortie colors blend together and I believe the white
is more cream.
Anyway, there is a note on breed descriptions and colors already.
Perhaps the moderators can move your note and my reply to it if it is
deemed necessary.
-Roberta
|
64.47 | owned by a tabby... | SANFAN::BALZERMA | | Mon Dec 23 1991 11:18 | 18 |
|
I wanted to elaborate more on the classic Tabby pattern. It never
ceases to amaze me what beautiful things Mother Nature can create. It
is truly a work of art.
Along with the ringing on the tail, the bracelets on the legs and
chest, the bulls-eyes on the side, other segments of the pattern
add to its beauty. The frown marks on the forehead that create the
intricate "M" extend up and over the back of the head in vertical lines
down to the shoulder markings. The shoulder markings are in the shape of
a butterfly with both upper and lower wings. The back markings are a
vertical line down the spine from the butterfly to the tail with a vertical
stripe paralleling it on each side, the three stripes separated by stripes
of the ground color. One of my favorite parts of the pattern is the
unbroken line that runs back from the outer corner of the eye, adding
to the facial expression.
|
64.48 | ThunderFelines? | 2183::GILLETT | And you may ask yourself, 'How do I work this?' | Fri Dec 27 1991 10:06 | 18 |
| I've been really curious about the cats that my parents own. Anybody care
to give them a shot in terms of breed?
Lewis & Clark the ThunderKitties are brothers. They are long-hair, orange,
with white underbellies and white markings on the nose and feet. They are
HUGE, tipping the scales at 15-18 pounds each (and the vet says they are
definitely healthy, and not overweight!). They had blue eyes as kittens,
green eyes as adults. Another distinguishing characteristic about these
cats is they talk *constantly*.
Maybe this is an inappropriate place to discuss their potential breed.
They are pets, not show kitties, and their ancestry is uncertain (they
were born on a golf course - their mama got eaten by a bobcat - seriously).
Anyway, what do you any of you think? Is there a category anywhere for
"Incredible Hulk Orange Cats?" :-)
/chris
|
64.49 | | MUTTON::BROWN | | Fri Dec 27 1991 10:58 | 19 |
| In most cases, breed characteristics go beyond color. There has to be
something else there besides color in order to determine what breed a
cat might resemble. Red is a common color in the cat fancy, and there
can be red Persians, red Exotics, red American Shorthairs, red Oriental
Shorthairs, etc. It would be nearly impossible to tell what breeds may
have been in your cats ancestry. It could just be that they come from
a very long line of "domestic" cats.
If they are shorthairs I would call them Domestic Shorthairs, and if
longhaired, Domestic Longhairs. :') Actually, from the sounds of it, I
would probably call your parent's cats Maine Coon Look-A-Likes. :')
I have two of those myself.
Also, all kittens and puppies are born with blue eyes. Their true eye
color will start to become apparent when they are between 8-12 weeks
old.
Jo
|
64.50 | | AUKLET::MEIER | Hey, furball, who pays the mortgage here? | Fri Dec 27 1991 13:10 | 9 |
| Well, I started the basenote, and have been examining my kittens ever since
trying to determine what color they are! Color has never been my strong point.
They are all three Domestic Shorthair mackerel tabbies (though Hemi has a white
bib/belly and paws, and a few white highlights). The ground color (I almost
said base coat :-)) is tan, and the stripes are black. I'm still working on the
rest. :-) I think they are ticked but am not sure. I'll be back with the rest
next week. Also, do the stripes all have to be continuous?
Tigger is a red mackerel tabby. No question about that one. :-)
|
64.51 | add "and white" for white feet | MUTTON::BROWN | | Fri Dec 27 1991 13:19 | 17 |
| On most silver tabbies, the ground color is silverish, and the stripes
are BLACK. On a brown tabby, the ground color is beige and the stripes
are dark blue. On a blue tabby, the ground color is fawn (has a
tannish cast to it) and the stripes are grey. Silver tabbies will have
green eyes, blue tabbies will have copper or gold eyes. Most laymen
call both silver tabbies and blue tabbies "grey tabbies". The eye
color and the color of the stripes should help you distinguish between
the colors.
If there is any pattern at all on the body, then the cat cannot be a
ticked tabby. The ticking replaces tabby markings on the body. Ticked
tabbies will still have the stripings on their legs, tail and face
though.
Not all the stripes will be complete or continuous. Some may break up.
Jo
|
64.52 | except... | A1VAX::BARTH | Bridge-o-matic does it again! | Mon Dec 30 1991 12:00 | 14 |
| BTW, genetically, silver tabbies can have copper (orange, gold, whatever
depending on breed) eyes. That sure helps to make things less clear. :^O
That can happen when a (say) black smoke meets up with a (say) brown tabby
and they decide to have a family. :^)
Silver tabbies from shaded silvers (green-eyed critters) and from
green-eyed silver tabbies will be greenies.
Molly says when a green-eyed parent makes kittens with an orange/copper eye
parent the offspring tend to have a "neither-nor" eye color that's something
like yellow.
K.
|
64.53 | If this is a BREED can you help identify? | DELNI::GASKELL | | Wed Jan 22 1992 10:11 | 26 |
| I am hoping Feliners can help me identify a possible breed.
In the process of looking for my missing Robbie I found another cat.
When trying to describe him for a newspaper add it occured to me that
maybe he is a particular breed. Here goes:
- Has the shape and walk of a miniture puma
- Grey spotty tiger markings
- Long legs (about 1 1/2 inches longer that usual) with large paws,
- Long body--about 4 inches longer than even our largest cat
- 3 thumbs on each front paw (7 claws each paw total)
- Double paws on back
- The largest green eyes I have ever seen on a cat, round with a
worried expression
- Soft, fine fur
- Exceptionally sweet nature
- Large appitite
- Runs like the wind and climbs trees to the top
- Covers his unwanted food like a Big Cat.
So, Feliners, any ideas what this cat is (other than a really pretty
common-or-garden moggie)?
(I hope I can eventually connect with the owners as someone loved this
cat very much.)
|
64.54 | | JUPITR::KAGNO | Kitties with an Attitude | Wed Jan 22 1992 10:38 | 9 |
| Maybe you found an ocelot!!
Sheesh... I'm not even going to try to attempt this one!
How much do you think the sucker weighs?!
--Roberta (who thinks you found a very large, polydactyl [double pawed]
domestic shorthair feline but anything is possible!!)
|
64.55 | and that's not all! | DELNI::GASKELL | | Wed Jan 29 1992 12:35 | 9 |
| Roberta, my guess he weighs about the same as a Maine coon cat, at the
moment.
UPDATE: Christopher has grown a little since I entered my last note. I
should also have said he has a broad face and bigish head. I have kept
cats for 45 years and I have never seen one like this before. If we
have another Feliners dinner I will bring photos.
Rosemary Gaskell
|
64.56 | | MAGEE::MERRITT | | Wed Mar 11 1992 12:47 | 7 |
| This probably don't belong in this note...but I'll ask anyway!!!
I have some cats with white whiskers, some cats with black whiskers,
but my little Dewey who is orange has black and white whisker together.
WHY???? Will they change????
Sandy
|
64.57 | | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Wed Mar 11 1992 13:28 | 10 |
| > I have some cats with white whiskers, some cats with black whiskers,
> but my little Dewey who is orange has black and white whisker together.
> WHY???? Will they change????
Sandy,
they seem to come in on Hana's face in random patterns of white and black..
sometime she will get black ones. I think it is random. and yes it will
change.
|
64.57 | Wonder what's up with this "record not locked" | DAGWST::BROWN | | Wed Mar 11 1992 14:10 | 6 |
64.58 | | DAGWST::BROWN | | Wed Mar 11 1992 14:11 | 5 |
| Birmans often have whiskers that are part black and part white. Since
whisker color isn't defined in the standard for our breed (some breeds
have it defined in the standard), I don't worry about it.
Jo
|
64.59 | no pattern here | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Wed Mar 11 1992 14:28 | 12 |
| here I am again:
Hana is my hybrid cat - part siamese for sure, probably some persian or
short-haired exotic - and her whiskers come in in a variety of colors -
sometimes. They do change around, and now she is sporting all white
whiskers. At any rate, they do change, they will change, and I don't
see a pattern. Dilly, my Birman, has white and gray whiskers (sometimes)..
so - I think the cat does whatever she feels like in the whisker department...
D 8^}
|
64.60 | | YOSMTE::CORDES_JA | Set Apt./Cat_Max=3..uh,I mean 4 | Wed Mar 11 1992 14:36 | 6 |
| Well with mine; Amelia and Carrie have all white whiskers. Onyx
has all black whiskers. Bailey, being Bailey, has a mix of white
whiskers and black whiskers. Goes quite nicely with her blue-cream
coloring I might add.
Jan
|
64.61 | trivia | MPO::ROBINSON | You have HOW MANY cats??!! | Thu Mar 12 1992 05:27 | 4 |
|
I don't know if anyone mentioned it already, but I came across
this bit of trivia yesterday. `Tabby' is derived from a street
named Atab in Bagdad.
|
64.62 | | OXNARD::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Thu Mar 12 1992 10:25 | 6 |
| On to a discussion of paw pad colors....
pink
black
pink and black on the same cute little foot (excuse me, paw)
copper (my orange cat nephew)
|
64.63 | | MUTTON::BROWN | | Thu Mar 12 1992 11:18 | 11 |
| Paw pad color is usually linked to coat color. Interesting note, red
and cream cats can get freckles of black in their nose leather, gums,
eye lids and paw pads as they age.
Birmans are considered a bi-colored cat and are allowed to have pink
and black paw pads. The standard states that pink are prefered tho. I
have had one kitten that had all black paw pads, and when you looked at
this huge white foot with all dark pads, you would swear you would
looking at the foot of a panda bear. So cute! 8')
Jo
|
64.64 | | CSSE32::RAWDEN | Cheryl Graeme Rawden | Thu Mar 12 1992 11:52 | 5 |
| Zelda has a small black mark like a beauty mark on one of her pads. She
also has a small black spot on the roof of her mouth which we noticed
when she was on her back yawning. :^)
Are these "freckles"?
|
64.65 | | MUTTON::BROWN | | Thu Mar 12 1992 12:20 | 3 |
| If she is red or cream, they are probably freckles.
Jo
|
64.66 | | CSSE32::RAWDEN | Cheryl Graeme Rawden | Thu Mar 12 1992 12:43 | 2 |
| Nope, she is mostly black with a few white spots here and there.
Must be beauty marks then. :^)
|
64.67 | Different noses, different toeses | VORTEX::DSSDEV::TAMIR | DECforms Roadie | Thu Mar 12 1992 17:52 | 13 |
|
Robin is mostly white but she has a black nose...just the leather--
the fur is pure white, but all her paw pads are black. Again, all the
surrounding fur is white. Biff has pink and grey paw pads. Mikey,
who looks so much like Robin I can barely tell them apart, has mixed
leather (sounds kinda kinky!). Beth, who is a tortie, has multicoloured
toes and a multicoloured nose. Julie, my red-haired girl, has the
cutest freckles all over her nose and lips. She looks so cute!
Cream point Chauncey wouldn't dare have freckles...they're so, well, he
thinks they're just too common for someone of his breeding.....
Mary
|
64.68 | | MAGEE::MERRITT | | Fri Mar 13 1992 05:32 | 10 |
| Well that also explains the little black dots Dewey (Red) is
getting on his nose!!!! I thought he had gotten into something
he shouldn't have...but I couldn't wipe it off! The poor guy....
I feel bad for rubbing his nose now!!!!
God...you learn something new in this file everyday!!
Sandy
|
64.69 | | VORTEX::TPMARY::TAMIR | DECforms Roadie | Fri Mar 13 1992 07:58 | 6 |
| Ya, well, don't feel bad about rubbing his nose....I took Julie to the vet
cause I thought she had sores......
All these cats and I'm still doing dumb stuff...
Mary
|
64.70 | guess not so strange after all.. | SOLVIT::IVES | | Fri Mar 13 1992 08:57 | 7 |
| Boy am I glad to see this note. Mocha has pink, white and black pads
on his feet. One hind food, (fur is all white) has all black pads
but the others are some and some. His two hind feet are white fur
and he has white mittens on his front feet. I of course
attibuted it to him, he's a strange cat in many ways.
Barbara
|
64.71 | | OXNARD::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Fri Mar 13 1992 10:31 | 5 |
| I think, in general, I'd ask the vet if a cat developed some
new black areas on the nose, chin, etc, just to be safe. Unless
you're absolutely certain it isn't feline acne or a potentially
harmful growth.
|
64.72 | all redheads get freckles, don't they? | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Fri Mar 13 1992 12:03 | 6 |
| Well, a flame-point of any breed, or just a pink-nosed cat for that matter,
quite commonly get freckles - Missy Hana has developed several on her nose
and one on her lip. However, they are small and flat discolorations...any
mark that has any size, or that has "texture", or that has an angry, inflamed
appearance is a candidate for a visit to the vet ASAP.
|
64.73 | Could it be....? | STUDIO::COLAIANNI | | Tue Mar 17 1992 08:23 | 7 |
| They get freckles as they age? Hmmm, Liver Spots? ;-)
Sorry, couldn't resist!
Love,
Y
|
64.74 | what's the name of that cat? | JUPITR::KWILSON | Just plane crazy | Sat Apr 04 1992 22:53 | 10 |
| I just read through this entire note trying to identify a type of cat
I've been admiring for some time. In one of the Friskies "What's got
into that cat" commercials, there is a tabby with very bold stripes
who appears blue. Has this one been described in here and if so (or
not) can someone tell me what it's called? I would like to find one
like it for a present to my wife (and our other 2 cats who probably
won't be too thrilled about it initially!)
Thanks/Keith
|
64.75 | | JUPITR::KAGNO | Kitties with an Attitude | Mon Apr 06 1992 06:27 | 22 |
| Keith,
The pattern you are referring to is called classic tabby. The breed is
called American Shorthair, although the classic tabby pattern can be
found on many other breeds of cat as well. Am Sh's are noted for their
striking classic tabby pattern.
I cannot recall the particular cat you describe on the commercial;
however, the Amercian Shorthair fits your description. I see we share
the same node name. I'm located in SHR1, and have lots of cat photos
in my office as well as a calendar featuring an AM SH cat. I would be
happy to help you if you want to stop by and see if the cat on the
calendar matches your description.
Classic tabbies come in silver with black stripes (very striking
pattern!), brown with black stripes, and blue (grey) with tan (?)
stripes.
Hope this info helps!
-Roberta
|
64.76 | BR SH! | CGOOA::LMILLER | hasten slowly | Mon Apr 06 1992 10:45 | 5 |
| Don't forget us - British Shorthairs! True AM SH are more common
but ... don't forget us in the tabby stakes! :)
|
64.77 | | AYOV27::TWASON | | Tue Apr 07 1992 04:04 | 8 |
| Can someone tell me if there is such a breed as BR SH blue-grey and
beige/brown tabby?
We've always said Murphy was more of a bluey/lilac colouring and he
definitely has the tabby markings.
Thanks
Tracy
|
64.78 | Blue/Cream ? | CGOOA::LMILLER | hasten slowly | Tue Apr 07 1992 15:15 | 5 |
| The breeders in this file are much better at colours than I,
however BR SH (the breed) do come in that colour - I think it is call
blue cream - a friend has one - I always refer to it as the peach coloured
cat. As far as I know this colour shouldn't have tabby markings - but with
unknown parentage anything can happen and frequently does.
|
64.79 | | SANFAN::BALZERMA | | Tue Apr 07 1992 15:51 | 10 |
|
A blue cream is a blue-grey (the lighter the better) cat with solid patches
of cream . There are no tabby markings. As mentioned earlier, tabby colors
and patterns are not breed specific. The "ground color" determines what the
exact color is. A blue tabby whether it be an American Shorthair, a
British Shorthair or an Exotic Shorthair is a blue (gray) cat with tabby
markings. And then there are always the "patched" tabbies....
|
64.80 | | JUPITR::KWILSON | Just plane crazy | Tue Apr 07 1992 16:04 | 14 |
| re .75 Thanks Roberta, I will drop by if I can figure out where you
sit. The calendar may help in id'ing the rascal. Perhaps the
cat is only striking to me (it's colors/markings) and some of
the more devoted cat fanciers in the file just think of it as
another one of those XXXYYYZZZZ cats.
Has someone seen this commercial?
Thanks/Keith
p.s. I would love it even more if the one I (hopefully) find
has "paddle" paws. I know that's not the proper term for
double paws but that's what they look like to me.
|
64.81 | | SANFAN::BALZERMA | | Tue Apr 07 1992 16:42 | 7 |
|
Keith, I have seen the commercial and the cat is beautiful! He/she
is a stunning Silver tabby. I am partial to the classic tabby pattern
on any cat. I think that the pattern is a piece of natural art. I just
prefer tabbies that happen to be Exotics! :')
|
64.82 | Exotic SH | CGOOA::LMILLER | hasten slowly | Tue Apr 07 1992 17:46 | 6 |
| I was looking at my silver tabby and thinking how much she resembled a
zebra striped danio (tropical fish) from the top view. Strange what
you think of when you're day dreaming!
Pardon my ignorance - but ... are there such things as Exotic SH tabbies?
|
64.83 | | AYOV27::TWASON | | Wed Apr 08 1992 04:28 | 8 |
| Thanks for the info, atleast now I know what colour to say he is when
people ask.
Tracy W
p.s. Did any UK noters see the Demond Morris programme on Monday about
cats? Great prog.
|
64.84 | | MAGEE::MERRITT | | Wed Apr 08 1992 06:20 | 8 |
| I seen the commercial with the Silver Tabby...and find the colors
are so bright and amazing!!! It's not even the pattern that is
striking to me...it's the vivid colors of gray/blue and black!
Beautiful striking cat...
Sandy
|
64.85 | I saw it, too | SELL3::FAHEL | Amalthea Celebras/Silver Unicorn | Wed Apr 08 1992 07:10 | 3 |
| Yeah...what Sandy said!
K.C.
|
64.86 | | AYRPLN::TAYLOR | Make the world your playground. | Wed Apr 08 1992 07:28 | 19 |
| Yeah, the blue with the black markings are absoultely beautiful. Just FYI,
Nancy DC's Silver shadow (scottish fold) is that color. He's absolutely
georgeous!
RE: Linda Miller
Yes, there is such a thing as a tabby Exotic Shorthair. Although a
good silver tabby exotic is very rare to find. Cindy Gerry's Tiger stripes
(stripey) is a brown tabby. Also, Diane Levin's Alex is a red tabby.
The reason that a good silver tabby is rare to find is that for some reason,
the silvers seem to be less "extreme" in the persians (which is actually
what I like in a persian.)
What I'd really like to see is a good shaded silver exotic shorthair!
That would be beautiful!
Holly
|
64.87 | | JUPITR::KAGNO | Kitties with an Attitude | Wed Apr 08 1992 07:33 | 6 |
| The colorpointed Exotics are to die for too, though I believe the head
type still needs some work to truely conform to the standard.
I have seen the classic tabby pattern on many Exotics at shows, but no
silvers yet.
|
64.88 | | MUTTON::BROWN | | Wed Apr 08 1992 15:27 | 14 |
| Holly,
We have a breeder out here on the west coast that breeds shaded and
chinchilla silver Exotic Shorthairs, very nice ones, I might add. They
are beautiful with their green eyes, mascara'd lids, noses, and silver
tipped coats.
I have seen the Friskies commercials too, and the cats that are used
appear to be American Shorthairs (I remember a silver and a red),
either a Chartreux or a blue British Shorthair (hard to tell the
difference in that flash of a second that they are running around), and
a Japanese Bobtail (the one jumping off the globe).
Jo
|
64.89 | | JUPITR::KWILSON | Just plane crazy | Wed Apr 08 1992 17:19 | 7 |
| Thanks for all the replies. Now that I know what I'm after, where
do I look for one and what should I expect to pay? As previously
stated, I don't know if these are in the same league as Persians,
Siamese, etc (the $$$$ league, that is).
Thanks/Keith
|
64.90 | prices vary depending on locale | MUTTON::BROWN | | Wed Apr 08 1992 17:28 | 15 |
| Kitten prices depend on the breed availability. Persian and Siamese
pet kittens are generally slightly less money than lesser known breeds.
Pet quality kittens of my breed, Birmans, range from $350-550 depending
on the area that you buy from. I charge $400 for mine. Most other
minority breeds fall into this range.
The best way to find out kitten prices is to visit a show and speak to
the breeders of the breed you want. You will get a good feel for the
breeders, and will be able to compare pricing between them. There can
be some differences. For instance, many breeders in my area charge the
same that I do, but they do not to the vaccinating, FIV and FELV
testing, and the blood panel that I do on my kittens. Be sure you know
what you are getting for your money.
Jo
|
64.91 | you need to know how to spell a word to find it in the dictionary | EMASS::SKALTSIS | Deb | Wed Apr 08 1992 22:24 | 9 |
| > "Paddle Paws"
I believe the term is polydaetyle, sometimes called a "mitten cat"
The late Argus J. Pussycat. Esq had triple paws in front, double in the
back. My Cute Little Panther is double pawed.
Deb
|
64.92 | | SANFAN::BALZERMA | | Thu Apr 09 1992 09:28 | 19 |
|
re: .88 - Jo, I certainly agree with you about the shaded &
chinchilla Exotics! They are doing an excellent job with their
breeding program!
As far as Exotic kittens go I know that Cin has kittens available.
One litter does not have any tabbies in it (bi-color and black) but
I do know that the other litter produced a lovely blue tabby girl.
Stripees (Cin's brown tabby) has produced some special tabby kitties.
My Bailey, Allsion's Alex and lest we forget Kate's shining star,
Ms. Preschie to name a few!
My ultimate cat is certainly the pointed Exotic. They have improved
tremendously. In the CFA Yearbook there is a cattery called "Visions".
The add pictures both a bluepoint and a sealpoint. They have come
a long way!
|
64.93 | Hard to picture - striped naked persians | CGOOA::LMILLER | hasten slowly | Thu Apr 09 1992 22:34 | 7 |
| I am trying to picture striped Exotics. I can honestly say I have
never seen one or a picture of one. TICA is very liberal - so I am
sure they are recognized. Exotics are the "naked persians" aren't
they? I've seen the "ordinary colours" but nothing else, maybe it's
like the British - the norm is blue, black etc and the others are more
"unusual".
|
64.94 | love those tabby Exotics | 32FAR::DLEVIN | | Tue May 05 1992 12:38 | 15 |
|
In regards to seeing pictures of striped (tabby) exotics.....Alex's
picture is in this year's CFF yearbook. His younger sister LandL's
Judy Garland of Cattyshack will be pictured in this year's yearbook, as
well as Alex again. She is a brown patched tabby. Exotics come in all
the same colors as the persians, and when using tabby parents getting
tabby kittens are quite common. I know using the Candy (red tabby) and
Stripees (brown tabby) combination has produced 3 litters thus far with
a majority (80%) of tabbies - 50% red tabbies, 20% brown tabbies, 10%
brown patched tabbies - the last 20% is tortie. Cats Magazine not too
long ago had a brown tabby exotic pictured. We just love the tabbies,
right Marlene?
-Diane
|
64.95 | we sure do, D !!! | SANFAN::BALZERMA | | Tue May 05 1992 22:00 | 1 |
|
|
64.96 | ...but i don't HAVE a patio!!!! | JUPITR::JYOUNG | | Wed May 06 1992 08:54 | 18 |
| Moderator .. This may be in wrong category ... feel free to move if
appropriate....
Question: What is a "Patio Cat" ????
When I picked up Harry (the Rat) from a pet store two years ago, his
sales slip said white/gray patio cat.
He's short-hair, and equal amounts of gray and white on his back and
head, mostly white belly and legs.
(His gray areas do resemble fieldstone in that they are asymmetric in
shape.)
I just had never ever heard the term "patio cat."
Any thoughts?
|
64.97 | | MUTTON::BROWN | set home/cat_max=5 girls 2 boys 2 hhps | Wed May 06 1992 11:01 | 5 |
| Never heard of the term, except from my sister who did have a patio
cat. She named her Paddy O'Kitty and found her a home. The cat had
been living on Jan's patio for months. :')
Jo
|
64.98 | .. is that a Tabby.. or an OWL.. | SONATA::MCCURDY | | Thu May 07 1992 09:59 | 5 |
| Marlene/Diane.. here I is.. did someone say Tabby.. oh yeah..
love those Tabbys.... both short and long hair.. smirk grin
giggle. Hugs to all...
Kate who is still 400+ notes behind..
|
64.99 | Colour-genetics | IJSAPL::MOLL | | Tue May 12 1992 08:12 | 196 |
|
Colour-genetics with cats !
Maybe something of interest to someone.
I'm not a specialist on this subject, but I've written a few lines
of colour-genetics on cats. I know that a lot can be said about
this subject and that my little story isn't complete.
Especially the 'difficult' stuff with point-cats.
I hope I haven't left out any important stuff but then again,
contribute if you please.
Every human beeing consists of a set of genes that makes him/her
unique. The genes determine if you're a boy or a girl, the color
of your eyes, hair, length etc.
This is also applicable for our furry friends (colour of fur, eyes,
length of fur, tail, body etc.).
These genes comes in pairs called chromosomes (so for every gene
there are 2 chromosomes).
From each of the parents the kitten get's one of each pair and
similar genes are connected to make a new set of genes for
the kitten.
A few pair of genes determine the color of the cat but a lot of
them makes out if he/she is slim or chubby.
The gender is determined by the male, because he's the only
one who's got 2 different chromosomes to make out the gender.
Male = X Y
Female = X X
To calculate the chance for a girl or a boy we make a grid and
put each chromosome seperate in a box.
Male/ | X Y
Female |
---------------------
X | XX XY
|
X | XX XY
As you can see the chances are equal (50 - 50).
Although there are litters with all girls or all boys the chances
are based on a large amount ofcourse.
For genes that make out colour, fur-length and pattern, letters
are being used. To make a difference between e.g. shorthair and
longhair, upper- and lowercase letters are used.
Or to make it more simple you can just say that the lowercase letter
is the opposite of the uppercase, like 'I' stand for silver,
so 'i' is than without silver.
The difference between upper- and lowercase is stated as
dominant and recessive. Dominant is always *shown*, recessive
is carried by the cat, but is only *shown* when 2 recessive genes
makes a pair.
Length
------
Length is symbolised by the letter L.
For fur-length we can use the grid in the same way, except we've got
4 combinations of each.
LL = shorthair
Ll = shorthair (carrier longhair)
lL = shorthair (carrier longhair)
ll = longhair
Male/ | L L | L l | l L | l l |
Female | | | | |
-------------------------------------------------------
L | LL LL | LL Ll | Ll LL | Ll Ll |
L | LL LL | LL Ll | Ll LL | Ll Ll |
--------|------------|----------|----------|----------|
L | LL LL | LL Ll | Ll LL | Ll Ll |
l | lL lL | lL ll | ll lL | ll ll |
--------|------------|----------|----------|----------|
l | lL lL | lL ll | ll lL | ll ll |
L | LL LL | LL Ll | Ll LL | Ll Ll |
--------|------------|----------|----------|----------|
l | lL lL | lL ll | ll lL | ll ll |
l | lL lL | lL ll | ll lL | ll ll |
--------|------------|----------|----------|----------|
Colours
-------
Dominant Recessive
Type Letter Type Letter
Black B Chocolate b
Brown C Lilac c
Silver I non-silver i
*Red O non-red o
with White S without white s
**White W not white w
These letters don't make out a colour but more or less the
way they are *presented* on a cat:
Agouti A Non-agouti a
Solid D Diluted d
there a few more (i can't remember these by heart), but most
colours are stated.
** = The White-gene overrides all other colour-genes. The cat
is completely white, but genetic it is still a coloured cat.
This is different from the 'S'-gene where the cat has a certain
amount of white.
* = The red-gene is the only gene that is defined on the gender
chromosome. The O-type is places on the X-chromosome of the cat.
Because a male has only 1 X-chromosome he's always totally red
(or cream, which is a diluted red). That's why there are no
tortie males.
A female is only totally red if she has a O-type on each of her
X-chromosomes.
To give an example, this grid will show us the combinations
of red.
Male/ | X Y
Female | no red red | - -
---------------------------------------------------
X red | tortie red | red red
| |
X no red | non-red tortie | non-red non-red
-----------|----------------------------------------
| female kittens | male kittens
Some chromosomes determine not the colour itself but the amount,
pattern and shading of colour.
These are the 'S', 'D', 'A' and 'T' -combinations.
'D' stands for diluted, so a genetic black cat (B) with a diluted
factor ('dd') turns out to be blue. If he/she got only 1 'd'-factor
the cat is black, but can produce blue kittens if mated with
a blue or blue-carrier cat. (remember that kittens get 1 chromosome
from every parent !!).
SO:
DD | black kittens only
DD |
DD | black kittens only, of which 1/2 carries diluted
Dd |
Dd | 1/4 blue, 3/4 black of which 1/2 carries diluted
Dd |
DD | black kittens only, of which all carries diluted
dd |
Dd | 1/2 black which carries diluted, 1/2 blue
dd |
dd | blue kittens only
dd |
This goes for the agouti-gene ('A') as well.
Do determine what colour your kittens will be you'll have to know
the genetic structure of both parents. If you're not sure, you
could leave out this combination and just say 'with' or 'without'
for that chromosome or just fill in a blank for the one that
you don't know (like A_ ==> could be Aa or AA).
For every chromosome pair of both parents, make up a grid.
So for cat A (aa B Dd) and cat B (Aa B D Ii) this will be the
combinations for A: aBD and aBd
combinations for B: ABDI, ABDi, aBDI and aBDi
Now make a grid for this one and combine those .
So let's do a little quiz!
What do you get if you mate a black smoke (blue-carrier) male
with a black tortie-tabby (blue-carrier) female ?
To make things easier i'll give you the genetic codes:
Male : aa B Dd Ii
Female : AA B Dd Oo
And what does these cats deliver ?
Male : W AA B DD
Female : AA B Dd Ss
Have fun.
|
64.100 | MC color? | YOSMTE::CANTONI_MI | Don't Litter.......SPAY! | Fri May 22 1992 13:36 | 5 |
| Is there a special color-name for Maine Coons that are silver mackeral
tabby with white legs, belly, and neck & chin?
Michelle
|
64.101 | | MUTTON::BROWN | set home/cat_max=5 girls 2 boys 2 hhps | Fri May 22 1992 14:16 | 3 |
| Yep, there's a special name, it's silver mackerel tabby and white. :')
Jo
|
64.102 | Thanks, Jo!! :^) | CAPITN::CANTONI_MI | Don't Litter.......SPAY! | Fri May 22 1992 16:13 | 1 |
|
|
64.103 | | SANFAN::BALZERMA | | Thu May 28 1992 23:15 | 72 |
|
BASIC PRINCIPLES OF CAT GENETICS
(from a CFA brochure)
* The male kittens in a litter always get their color from the dam.
* The color of the female kittens in a litter is always a combination
of the sire's and dam's color.
* To get a genetic red or genetic cream female kitten, the sire must
be a genetic red or a genetic cream and the dam must also have red
or cream in her.
* Only the two parents can determine the color of a kitten. The
colors, patterns, etc., found in the pedigree of a kitten will NOT
directly effect the color of the kitten.
* A dominant characteristic (dominant colors, shaded, smoke, white,
tabby, bi-color, etc.) cannot skip generations. It cannot go from one
generation to the next without showing the characteristic in each
generation.
* Cats displaying a dominant color (black, red, tortie, etc.) must have
a parent which displays a dominant color.
* Two recessive color parents (cream, blue, etc.) cannot produce a cat
of a dominant color (black, red, tortie, etc.).
* Two colorpointed parents cannot produce a non-colorpointed
offspring.
* To get a colorpointed kitten both parents must be carrying the
colorpointed gene (even if they are not colorpointed themselves).
* The mating of a colorpointed Persian and a Persian with no
colorpointed background will produce NO colorpointed kittens.
* A tabby cat must have at least one parent that is either shaded or
a tabby.
* All red cats will have some tabby markings. Whether they can
produce as a tabby will depend on whether it is a true tabby with a
tabby (or shaded) parent or whether it is a red with tabby markings.
A red tabby that is not a true tabby cannot produce a tabby offspring of
any other color without being bred to a true tabby (or shaded).
* A cat with a white undercoat (smoke or shaded) must have a parent
that has a white undercoat.
* A shaded cat must have at least one parent that is shaded.
* A tabby cat must have at least one parent that is either shaded or
tabby.
* Shaded parents can produce smoke offspring, but smoke parents cannot
produce shaded offspring.
* A bi-colored cat must have a bi-colored parent.
* Tri-color cats (blue-cream, tortie, calico) are almost always
female, but males can and do occur occasionally.
* A white cat must have a white parent.
* Two longhairs cannot produce a shorthair.
* A mackerel tabby kitten must ahve mackerel tabby parent.
* A spotted tabbykitten must have a spotted tabby parent.
|
64.104 | | SPEZKO::RAWDEN | Cheryl Graeme Rawden | Fri May 29 1992 05:42 | 4 |
| >> * Two longhairs cannot produce a shorthair.
Can the assumption be made of the opposite, that two shorthairs cannot
produce a longhair?
|
64.105 | | JUPITR::KAGNO | Kitties with an Attitude | Fri May 29 1992 08:02 | 17 |
| Thanks, Marlene. That was some cool information!!
Cheryl,
Two shorthairs can indeed produce a longhair if *both* cats are carrying
the recessive gene for long hair. To further elaborate, when breeding
a shorthair to a longhair, the shorthair must be carrying the gene for
long hair in order for some of the offspring to show long hair. If the
shorthaired parent does not carry the gene for long hair, then all
kittens in the first generation will have short hair (because it is a
dominant trait), but some will carry the gene for longhair to pass onto
future generations.
I think I explained this correctly! :^)
-Roberta
|
64.106 | | AYRPLN::TAYLOR | FREE HUGS! 1st come, 1st serve .. | Fri May 29 1992 08:11 | 9 |
| Also, people must understand that White is not genetically a color. It
masks all colors.
Two white cats can very easily produce a black and white cat or a red cat.
(I've seen the results!). Also, a black and white cat bred to a white cat
can very easily produce a pure white cat.
Holly (who has turkish angoras who are predominantly white)
|
64.107 | maybe next time around... | SANFAN::BALZERMA | | Fri May 29 1992 09:21 | 9 |
|
You are welcome, Roe! I thought that it was a great "cheat sheet" for
those of us that get lost in all genetic maps, etc. As most folks know
I adore tabbies and was disappointed to find out that the cats' pedigree
has no impact on the pattern of the kitten, a tabby parent is
necessary to produce a tabby kitten. I was hoping that because
Callie's dad was a tabby I might be able to produce tabbies. Looks
like I'll be getting solids and particolors!
|
64.108 | forgot to mention... | SANFAN::BALZERMA | | Fri May 29 1992 09:31 | 6 |
|
To obtain CFA color genetic charts at no charge, contact the CFA, PO
Box 1005 Manasquan, NJ 08736-1005, or call 908-528-9797. Specify
either the pointed or non-pointed chart.
|
64.109 | How would *you* describe him? | CREATV::DANA | | Wed Mar 10 1993 07:01 | 23 |
| Maybe you can help me - we recently adopted a 9-month old male
shorthair. He's got strange markings and I'd like to know how to
describe them 'officially'. Also, if any of you have clues as to what
breed(s) he might be...
Spunky is grey, white, and tan. He's got dark gold eyes, pink paw
pads, and a pink nose. His grey patches are striped grey/dark grey.
His tail is ringed grey with dark grey and faint tan. He's got a
couple of small mainly tan with a little grey strip patches on his
tummy and on the inside of his hind legs. His face is 60% white, with
a grey stripe patch over and around one eye, leading up to his ears -
one ear has a patch of white at the tip, the other has a stripe of
white going up the outside edge to the tip, the stripe connected to a
swirl of white on his shoulder. His coat, in the grey patches, has
hair that is multicolored - dark grey and light grey with some hairs
having a faint tan or white tip. His body has about 60% grey stripe
and 40% white, delineated neatly.
He's got a medium build, not as slender as a siamese, but not as broad
as a coon cat. Any ideas??
Thanks,
Dana and Spunky
|
64.110 | | DELNI::MANDILE | with an e | Wed Mar 10 1993 08:17 | 2 |
| Hard to say without seeing him....but maybe a Tabby w/ white
domestic cat. Short haired?
|
64.111 | Short haired and camera-shy | CREATV::DANA | | Wed Mar 10 1993 09:08 | 5 |
| Yes - short haired. I've been trying to get a picture of him in case
he gets out (my neighbor would probably end up adoopting him if I
didn't have a picure of him!) but he's not fond of the camera....
Dana
|
64.112 | | AYRPLN::TAYLOR | Feline Purrrfect | Wed Mar 10 1993 09:29 | 5 |
| It SOUNDS like a blue tabby with white. Can't understand the tan,
though.
Holly
|
64.113 | Blue tabby with white domestic shorthair | DAGWST::BROWN | everybody run Prom Queen's Gotta Gun! | Wed Mar 10 1993 10:17 | 14 |
| I think he is a blue tabby with white. The tan is normal with a blue.
I can't remember what it is called right now, but it is normal on a
blue tabby. Blue tabby's that don't the tan coloration o their
undercoat are called Blue Silver's. The silver gene does something to
the tan to make it turn white. Anway, I have a blue tabby and white
household pet, and he has the tan.
It is hard to tell from a description, since people have a tendency to
describe both blue and silver as grey. But, generally the eye color
will help. Generally speaking, if they have green eyes they have the
silver gene. If they have gold/copper eyes, it's more likely the blue
gene.
Jo
|
64.114 | | AYRPLN::TAYLOR | Feline Purrrfect | Wed Mar 10 1993 14:21 | 8 |
| RE: Jo: Color of eyes with Blue
Not always, Jo. Remember, Russian Blues and Korats are "blue" but both
have Green eyes. Genetics are really flaky sometimes!! (-:
Holly
|
64.115 | | DAGWST::BROWN | everybody run Prom Queen's Gotta Gun! | Wed Mar 10 1993 14:35 | 4 |
| But don't Russian Blues and Korats have the silver gene (thus the
silver tipping on the coat)? That would account for their green eyes.
Jo
|
64.116 | | EMASS::SKALTSIS | Deb | Wed Mar 10 1993 17:32 | 5 |
| I believe that the "tan" color is called "peach" (or at least that is
what the groomer told me). My Haralambos (Harry) has a little of this
on his face.
Deb
|
64.117 | | SMURF::S_FRASER | Boston fans do it w/their Sox on | Thu Mar 11 1993 04:31 | 6 |
|
Isn't that gray/white/tan combination known as 'dilute calico'? I seem
to remember hearing that term somewhere to describe a similar cat
(although one without the tabby markings).
|
64.118 | | AYRPLN::TAYLOR | Feline Purrrfect | Thu Mar 11 1993 05:39 | 14 |
| Sandy,
Yes, the gray/white/tan combination is as "dilute calico", but this
person seems to be talking about a male cat. 99.9% of calicos are
females.
RE: Jo and the silver gene.
Russian blues do, but Korats don't. Korats are solid blue. They have
a "sheen" to their coats because the shaft of their furr is hollow,
giving a bit of a silvery sheen to them, but that's all.
Holly
|
64.119 | CYA | DAGWST::BROWN | everybody run Prom Queen's Gotta Gun! | Thu Mar 11 1993 12:29 | 3 |
| Well, I did say that "generally" the blues have gold eyes. :') :') :')
Jo
|
64.120 | | AYRPLN::TAYLOR | Feline Purrrfect | Thu Mar 11 1993 12:39 | 4 |
| Hey, Korats have never been known to be "normal". (-:
Holly
|
64.121 | Korats normal? NOT! | DELNI::MANDILE | with an e | Thu Mar 11 1993 12:41 | 2 |
|
I second that remark! (;
|
64.122 | | EMASS::SKALTSIS | Deb | Fri Mar 12 1993 17:52 | 12 |
| Yep, Harry is DEFINATLY a male; But in order to call a cat a calico*,
the cat needs to have big splotches of the red color (or "brindled"
red and black for a tortie); In Harrys's case, this peach is just an
outline aound his eyes, with a faint peach tiger stripe radiating to the
cheeks. Alexandra sort of has this, too
In looking more closely, though, Harry is silver (with green eyes), and
Alex is blue (with big dark yellow eyes).
Deb
*I have the definition from the Calico Cat Registry, somewhere.
|
64.123 | ;^} maybe they need more oil in their diets!!! ;^} | SPEZKO::BELFORTI | We need BIG guns, really *BIG* guns.. | Mon Mar 15 1993 10:22 | 8 |
| Could be rust..... ;^}
my silver tabby is rusting with age!!!!!
She is almost 9 and has several splotches of tan that she didn't have
until we moved out here to New England!!!!! Holly, you saw Chessie's
"rust"..... remember me telling you about it last August???
|
64.124 | Food Coloring Maybe? | EARRTH::DREYER | Waiting for the snow to melt! | Wed Mar 17 1993 05:17 | 5 |
| We had two chocolate point Siamese, who in their old age started to "rust"
too. We finally decided it was the food color from their food being
transferred from their tongues to their coats!
Laura
|
64.125 | The tabbies perfer the term "tarnish" | MKOTS3::SCANLON | Digging in the dirt. | Thu Mar 18 1993 14:06 | 10 |
| No, silver tabbies "tarnish" with age. I'm not really
sure why this happens, but when Boogie was about 4 the
breeder who I got Mips and Belle from told me that. At
3 1/2 I noticed that Belle was starting to tarnish in
a couple of spots. I feel like I should be polishing
them up or something....... :-) Someone in here I think
once said something about too much sunlight washing out
the coat....I don't remember where I saw it though.
MM
|
64.126 | | DAGWST::BROWN | everybody run Prom Queen's Gotta Gun! | Mon Mar 22 1993 10:55 | 8 |
| Sunlight can do it and so can the cat's saliva. That is one reason why
the silver's at shows usually have bibs around their necks. That way
they can't spend the day licking their ruffs and turning them rusty
colored. :')
Black cats can rust too, but that is mostly due to sunlight.
Jo
|
64.127 | WHY? | MILPND::J_TOMAO | | Fri Aug 27 1993 08:28 | 8 |
| WHY?
Why is a calico cat referred to as a "Money Cat"? I have heard this 3
times in the past year. Is it just the male or both male and female?
How did they get this nickname?
Thanks for your asssitance,
JOyce
|
64.128 | Calico/Money Cat | STUDIO::COLAIANNI | I have PMS and a handgun ;-) | Fri Aug 27 1993 09:24 | 19 |
| Ok, I'll take a shot at this one. (although this being my first week
back from vacation, I may still be brain dead!)
Calico cats are almost invariably female. Almost. It's really the male
that causes the nickname 'Money Cat', because there really aren't any.
It was thought that if you had a true calico that was male, it would be
worth a lot of money, thus the nickname.
Now I've heard that a male wouldn't really be worth a lot of money,
because they are invariably sterile, and thus worth nothing as far as
breeding. I don't have proof of this. Can anyone else clear this part
up? I've never seen a male calico (or tortie for that amtter) or known
anyone that has seen one, so I don't know about the real worth, except
maybe a priceless pet. ;-)
Hope this helps. (I also hope this isn't one to be moved that I
missed!)
Yonee
|
64.129 | | SMAUG::MILLER | Valerie Miller | Fri Aug 27 1993 09:58 | 10 |
|
I read somewhere that the calico/tortoiseshell coloring is caused by a
dominant Orange gene with a recessive Orange gene, color genes are
carried on the sex chromozomes (X,Y), and only X chromozomes can carry
either type of Orange. Therefore a cat needs 2 X's (i.e. female) to be
a calico or tortoiseshell. The only time that a male can be calico/
tortoiseshell is if it isn't a "true" male, i.e. if it actually has
three sex chromozomes like XXY, and that's why it is sterile.
V
|
64.130 | | SUBURB::ODONNELLJ | | Fri Aug 27 1993 10:10 | 3 |
| I always thought that the tortoiseshell gene is a lethal gene for the
male cats, killing most of the male tortoiseshells in the womb, except
for a very few that are born sterile.
|
64.131 | | VMSMKT::THOMPSON | Kate Comiskey Thompson | Fri Aug 27 1993 10:13 | 12 |
| OK, here's another theory. My Poppy is tortie and white, and when we
adopted her from the shelter, the woman there referred to her as a
"money cat," a term I'd never heard. When I asked where the term comes
from, the woman said it's because their orange spots look like gold
coins. Sounded good to me.
However, my brother-in-law (married my sister and her five calico
cats) says they're called money cats because its costs so much to keep
them in the manner they're accustomed to!
Kate
|
64.132 | And the winner is..... ;-) | STUDIO::COLAIANNI | I have PMS and a handgun ;-) | Fri Aug 27 1993 11:29 | 6 |
| I just knew somebody out there was going to know the chromosome set up!
Thanks! I knew it was somehitng like that, but, in my p[resent
condition after vacation, there was no way I would have even made an
attempt at that! ;-)
Yonee (who LOVES the wealth of info one can glean from this file)
|
64.133 | only calicos with ROUND gold patchs are registerable as money cats | EMASS::SKALTSIS | Deb | Fri Aug 27 1993 22:54 | 12 |
| RE: .131 and the orange spots
There is a calico cat registry. When I sent away for paperwork to
register the late Lovely Pip S. Pussycat, Esq, they asked you to
classify your calico as (there were about 8 classifications). The money
cat classification is only for those calicos whose gold patchs are
round (in the shape of coins).
Deb
P.S. For the record, Pip was a tortishell and white, the most rare of
the calico "family" of coat patterns.
|
64.134 | | AYRPLN::TAYLOR | Complete happiness at last!! | Mon Aug 30 1993 09:27 | 16 |
| Just an FYI, I HAVE seen a male calico. I was at a cat show in
Pennsylvania and PIMA was competing in the kitten class (she's a
cornish rex). Above her name, I saw this other cat classified as "Male
Calico". Of course, everyone laughed at the "misprint" and immediately
made it female. Until the first ring.
The judge saw the "misprint" and automatically changed it to female.
She then went and got the cat, and picked him up by the back end. As
soon as she felt the back end, her eyes lit up and she said, "It is!!"
In talking to the owners, this is the second one they have had.
They're not sure if he's steril or not, but his father is the other
calico they had.
Holly (now Ventura)
|
64.135 | XXY is right | FSTCAT::COMEFORD | I'd rather be a Bandit than a Bogey... | Thu Sep 09 1993 10:57 | 17 |
| I remember this from High School Biology. The person who said that you need
2 X chromosomes is correct. Thus any traditional male that is calico is XXY
a genetic failing known as Klinefelters (sp) syndrome in humans. It is
Phenotypically (i.e. to appearance) male. However most XXY suffers are not
fertile (in either Humans OR cats to my memory). However if one were fertile
it would have a high probablity of producing more kittens of the
same (as it is very likely to pass on that attached XY pair, and if that
XY pair meets an egg voila you have XXY again). The other way would be
whats known as a sport. Basically a random mutation that made calico like
behavior (sports are not unknown in the cat world, witness the Rex). That
would also probably be fertile. I think this orange gene thing is also related
to why orange and white cats are almost always male. Cat fur color pairings are
fairly well mapped as (for better or worse) cats have been used in MANY genetic
studies as they have fairly short generations for large mammals.
Thanks,
Keith
|