T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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719.1 | | NETWKS::GASKELL | | Tue Mar 15 1994 07:14 | 4 |
| My bad cat Christopher has double toes and tripple thumbs--just double
paws on the back though. Three of my cats have "mittens" right now.
Compared with the three golly giants, the two seem to have such
little paws. I love them all just the same.
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719.2 | FORTRAN Cats Have Do Clause? | LJSRV2::FEHSKENS | len - reformed architect | Tue Mar 15 1994 07:41 | 11 |
|
I have heard the story that polydactyl cats originated in the US from
Boston, but I don't recall if it was a spontaneous mutation or if the
first polydactyl cat arrived here on a boat from some faraway place.
I once knew a polydactyl cat who had 4, 5, 6 and 7 toes in clockwise
order as you looked down on him. This would have made counting on his
fingers an interesting proposition.
len.
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719.3 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Tue Mar 15 1994 07:47 | 14 |
| Re .2: The theory in the article was that, since the polydactyl gene
requires (they think) the presence of some other gene to activate, that
the appearance in Boston may have resulted from the arrival of a cat
with the activating gene, not necessarily of a multi-toed cat. [I can't
help wondering whether mitten cats are better mousers, having bigger
mitts, y'see - but since some of the best mousers of my acquaintance
have fairly *small* paws (one, Abigail of beloved memory, only had 1.5
functional paws, as her right front foot was partly paralyzed), it
doesn't follow.]
The article also said polydactyls tend to be "characters," and Phillip
certainly is, but then, to me, most cats are. ;-)
-b
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719.4 | A vote against breeding. | BPSOF::EGYED | Per aspera ad astra | Wed Mar 16 1994 04:57 | 15 |
| I hope this difference to be valued...
I think polydactile cats are just fine, and lovely as any other cat.
But I do not think they are a purrfect construction, extra toes seem
for me a failure in the genetic tables. And I am strictly against
breeidung failurous genes, for they might superimpose and the bred
itself would get unhealthy and unhappy.
There is a lot of shame 'breeders' already 've done to creatures of
this world. Look around for misbuilt and misbreeded (misbred? sp.)
poor animals, not only cats and dogs...
I would say love the mittens but do not breed them.
Just my 2 cents.
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719.5 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Wed Mar 16 1994 06:24 | 9 |
| Re .4: FWIW, I'm not promoting them as a "breed" either - I just
mentioned the article because it sounded interesting. (My Phillip won't
be doing any breeding, in any case!)
But polydactylism seems to be doing very well on its own, suggesting
that it's not a "failed" gene at all; indeed, it seems to be a fairly
successful trait.
-b
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719.6 | She must use base 17? | AIMHI::SPINGLER | | Wed Mar 16 1994 08:09 | 16 |
|
HMMmmmmm, originated in Boston. That would acount for the popularity
of "double-pawed" (an eastern name for polydactyl cats,) in New
England.
I'm not too sure about breeding either. My friend has a cat with 10
toes on one front foot and 7 (I think) on the other. The problem with
Miss Minuet, (the cat) is that some of her extra toes are very small and
grow in-
between her normally sized toes. which means that if we do not clip her
claws she would have a nasty ingrown claw which could be painfully
crippling.
Feline Podiatrist, (Have clippers will trim, :-)
Sue & Crew
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719.7 | | JULIET::CORDES_JA | Four Tigers on my Couch | Wed Mar 16 1994 08:33 | 6 |
| As far as I know the polydactyl trait is a naturally occurring
trait. I've never heard of anyone who purposely breeds for that
(though I'm sure with as many backyard breeders as there are it's
not entirely impossible that some people are doing this).
Jan
|
719.8 | | NETWKS::GASKELL | | Thu Mar 17 1994 06:52 | 4 |
| .3
Christopher (note .1) can catch and kill a bird on the wing by smacking
it between his massive front paws in mid-gallop.
|
719.9 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Thu Mar 17 1994 07:25 | 13 |
|
When I first saw reference to "double paws" here, I had no idea
what it meant.
I have never seen a cat with more than the regular number of toes.
I have been on holiday in many European countries - and there were loads
of strays in most places - I didn't see any there either.
If they are in Europe, they're in hiding!
Heather
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719.10 | Polydactylism is a NATURAL gene... | POWDML::MCDONOUGH | | Thu Mar 17 1994 13:30 | 29 |
| Hmmm... I recall reading an article in a cat publication a few years
ago that indicated the polydactyl's actually originated in a small town
in Scotland....and two kittens carrying the gene were brought to the
Boston area in the lat 1800---early 1900 timeframe, and these two
became the ancestors of all the current polys. As I understood it from
the article, the poly strain seemed to have died out naturally--perhaps
by another dominant gene that was present in the local population---and
the characteristic doesn't exist or at least is not very common in the
area in Scotland that it began in. Isolation of the gene in the U.S.
may have caused it to become more dominant in the cat population.
According to any vet that I have talked to, this is NOT considered
to be a negative trait, nor should there be any fear of breeding a poly
kitten. In fact, the genes that make a Siamese a Siamese or a Persian a
Persian can, in fact, be considered more negative in scope than this
gene, simply because the gene that causes polydactyl feet is a
NATURALLY occurance, and the genes that make some of the specific
breeds what they are are the result of human engineering, A.K.A.
"UNnatural species selective breeding".
NATURAL gene development is what allows evolution to occur.
UNNATURAL selection, or HUMAN 'design' of species is NOT considered to
be natural evolution. A negative characteristic of human engineering is
the flat face of the Persian and the flat face in canine breeding of
the Bulldog. Neither of these facial structures are natural, and many
examples of these animals are prone to having severe breathing and
nasal problems. This same problem holds true in the back problems
inherent in Dachshunds and Bassett Hounds..
John Mc
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719.11 | Agree. | BPSOF::EGYED | Per aspera ad astra | Thu Mar 17 1994 23:57 | 7 |
| re .10
I agree. I am not agains polys! I am only afraid that starting extra
breeding them might end up in 'human engineering' and misbreeds like
you mentioned. I vote for let the engineering to God - and the cats
themselves! :^)
Nat
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719.12 | | POWDML::MCDONOUGH | | Fri Mar 18 1994 13:37 | 18 |
|
Re .11
I can't recall anyone actually BREEDING to get the Polydactyl
feature into a breed-type, and would actually think it may be pretty
hard to do witht he wide proliferation of the gene in the U.S. today.
In the New England area, the possibility of haveing a litter with
'double-paws' is pretty high, but even in those litters, not ALL
kittens will always be doubles.
I guess there COULD be some drawbacks to double paws in a feral
animal, but in a housecat, the double paw is sort of cute. I had a
friend that owned a Tabby female that looked like she was wearing
snowshoes!! She was really double-pawed, but she got along fine with
the others...
All three of mine are old singles....
JM
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719.13 | Very old trait in New England - back to Revolutionary war at least | FSTCAT::COMEFORD | I'd rather be a Bandit than a Bogey... | Mon Mar 21 1994 09:45 | 12 |
| Polydactyl cats were favored by MANY folks as barn cats
(legend had it they were better mousers, or so my Grand-dad
said, though he could have been pulling my leg...).
I remember an article in Scientific American back in the Mid
80's. Some socialogist had actually tracked the path the
Tories (loyalists during american Revolution) had taken to
Canada by looking at the relative frequency of polydactyls
in the local cat population with respect to the normal
occurence of the gene.
Thanks,
Keith
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719.14 | Polys Rule | DECWET::PAINTER | | Thu Mar 24 1994 14:29 | 36 |
| I had a cat (Pumpkin a wonderful sweet intelligent critter) who
had double thumbs on both front paws. She was a terror as a kitten
and we trimmed her claws back regularly to keep her from climbing
until we could 'kitten-proof' (Ha Ha Ha ...) the house. It did not
even slow her down. She used her thumbs to grasp items to pull
herself up with (rough wall coverings, a thin 'art deco' lamp, etc...).
I told this to my new vet in the midwest while I was there, and she
did a 'soft' xray of the paws. She had an extra joint in each thumb and
it was easy to see why she could do what she did ... she had opposible
thumbs!!! Two to a paw !!! She also stayed up on snow better than any
cat (except Jeffums one of her off-spring with double paws front and
back) I've seen. (Jeffums doesn't like the snow the way she did, so
I am not sure he counts :-)
My current fav. cat, Pause, is her grandkid (both sides, but that's
another story, just watch who you let cat sit :-) and she has some
interesting variations. One 'thumb' on each front paw is diminutive and
lacks tendons to control it. One front paw has an 'outside spare' claw
that emits from the side of the thumb and corkscrews ... really wierd
no pad, no toe, just an extra claw. Gotta keep that one trimmed or she
scratches her face when she cleans :-( .
The upside is that all of Pumpkins kittens (a very sneaky and prolific
kitty, pregos the 1st 2 times we took her to the vet to get fixed. Her
first heat as a kitten and her first heat after the kittens were born. )
are all real smart alecs^H^H^H^H^H critters with good personalities,
with about a 20% hit rate on polydactalism.
If anyone sees a poly-cat in calico (not the large patches, but the
more 'blended' variety) up for adoption, let me know!!! (After all
Punk-cat (aka Pumpkin) was a Nashua cat and a good number of you guys
are in that neck of the woods ... Hey can you tell I miss Pumpkin?
Anyway, I ramble ...
Tjp
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719.15 | a lot of toes! | PARITY::DENISE | And may the traffic be with you | Thu Mar 24 1994 15:05 | 15 |
| I have several cats with extra toes. Actually, Mitties, appropriately
named for her "mitties", has double feet. The front paws are actually
2 parts. There's the regular paw with five toes, and on the
front/inside there is 2 more huge toes, almost opposing. She kind of
uses them as opposing units. Although she had been declawed at some
point, she still climbs and hunts and uses her incredible paws in
strange ways. When she is sitting and you look at her from the front,
it looks like she has 2 extra feet just kind of sitting there next to
the regular front paws...weird.
Chief Kitty who is also declawed before he came into my life has
7 toes on each front foot. Cleo has 8 claws on the front and 7 on
the back feet, but hers are all in perfect line, it does not look
like extra feet or opposing toes. There's just all these toes
on a cute round paw. They all have claws too. Great when it comes
time to trim.....
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719.16 | Just ducky... | STAR::SROBERTSON | | Wed May 17 1995 14:08 | 7 |
| My Floyd has extras as well, his feet are big to begin with and he's a newcomer
to our home...he kinda adopted us and is still in the adjustment period. I was
just watching him the other night and noticed he kinda walks like a duck with
his extra toes...of course it could be that he walks like a duck because he's
getting so FAT! :)
Sandra
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