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The ticked tabby pattern is a result of a different allele at the same gene locus as the mackerel and classic tabby patterns and this allele is dominant over the others. So a T a T a genotype as well as T a T m and T a T b genotypes will be ticked tabbies. The ticked tabby coat essentially masks any other tabby pattern, producing a non ...
The breed began development in the 1980s in the U.S. when Judy Sugden, a breeder looking to find the difference between the mackerel markings in tabbies, noticed distinctive markings in one of her cats. [6]
The Tabby locus on chromosome A1 accounts for most tabby patterns seen in domestic cats, including those patterns seen in most breeds. The dominant allele Ta M produces mackerel tabbies, and the recessive Ta b produce classic (sometimes referred to as blotched) tabbies. [11]
All Western coat colours and patterns are genetically possible in the breed, such as tabby, solid, tortoiseshell, and bicolour. However, the most common colour in the Siberian cat breed is black (brown) mackerel tabby. [6] [7] The Western coat colours are white, black, blue, red, and cream.
In 2013 the GCCF recognised the Aztec as a separate breed. The Aztec is a mackerel tabby coated version of the Ocicat that would often occur in litters but not meet the standard of the Ocicat as it called for spotted cats only. Aside from the coat it is otherwise identical to the Ocicat. [9]
Image credits: @bumble.bees.cosplay Speaking about orange cats, it’s often believed that ginger tabbies are a separate breed, but actually, a tabby is just a pattern on a cat’s coat and many ...
The Tabby patterns include [12] Classic Tabby, Mackerel Tabby, Spotted & Ticked Tabby. The non-tabby patterns include: Tortoiseshell, Bi-Colour, Van patterns Bi-Colour & White, Smoke, Tipped & Colourpointed. British Shorthair's nose colour: black, cherry red, brick red; a circle of black nasal line on the periphery.
The following list of cat breeds includes only domestic cat breeds and domestic and wild hybrids. The list includes established breeds recognized by various cat registries , new and experimental breeds, landraces being established as standardized breeds, distinct domestic populations not being actively developed and lapsed (extinct) breeds.