Plunkette is a tiger-striped cat. Someone argued that he’s a tabby. I always considered a tabby to be a female cat-- coloring had nothing to do with it.
Searching the internet on “cat coloring” I found a few cat fancier sites that claim 1)White cats with blue eyes are deaf and 2)Tortoiseshell cats are female.
White cats with blue eyes are indeed deaf. My old cat Tink (a girlfriend got her in a breakup) is the sweetest cat who ever lived, and is deaf as a doorpost.
Calicos and tortoiseshells are almost always female, because the traits for orange and black have to appear on each X chromosome respectively. If you see a male calico, it’s a genetic aberration, like an XXY. There was some speculation that more crimes are committed by these types of cats, but no conclusive studies have confirmed this.
It comes down to genetics. The gene that results in calico coloring for example, is recessive and on the X-chromosome. You need two X-Chromosomes with that gene for calico traits to express, so when you see a calico, it’s a female (or the ocasional rare mutant).
In the same vein, aren’t orange cats almost always male? I consider tiger striped cats to be tabby regardless of sex.
I have a white cat with blue eyes, however he has developed very faint flame points, he’s not deaf. I have heard that when you see a white cat with one blue and one green or yellow eye (mis-matched eyes) the cat will be deaf on the blue eyed side, only in that ear.
My Stupid (who passed away last year at 17 or so) was a black and white-- black with white mittens and breast-- who was the sweetest, lovingest cat ever.
Plunkette-- the aforementioned tiger-striped-- is a little bastard who doesn’t like to get petted and growls if you look at him funny.
See, I thought cat coloring depended on conditions in the womb. That cloned cat that made the news recently looked nothing like it’s, um, predecessor even though genetic testing proved it to be a clone. What gives?
It gets kind of technical, but here’s a decent webpage that describes it. Here’s an excerpt:
While the cloned kitten (named copycat of all things) had the same DNA as her mother, The process where the genetic information on one of the X chromosomes “shuts off” is still determined by random chance.
Other things can affect the expression of traits. The fur on a siamese cat is genetically coded to produce a dark pigment, but only below a certain temperature. Above that temperature, it produces a light pigment. This is why siamese coloring is dark on the extremities (feet, tail, face, and eartips) and light everywhere else. It’s also why they’re born mostly light and grow into their fur pattern, kittens run hotter, and being smaller, the heat travels further into the extremities.
I think the actual question was answered pretty well above, but BTW tabby refers to coat markings only and has nothing to do with sex. There is an excellent treatment of this topic in The Book of the Cat, Michael Wright and Sally Waters, ed., 1980, with about 750 words, plus photos and illustrations, on the color of tabbies.
A geneticist checks in with another interesting cat coloring tidbit.
Himalayan and Siamese cat coloration is due to a heat-sensitive mutation in the tyrosinase pigment gene. Tyrosinase is the enzyme responsible for metabolizing the enzyme tyrosine into dark pigment (melanin). In Himalayans and Siamese (as well as the Himalayan mouse), there is a mutation in the gene which causes it to stop functioning at body temperature. So, the warmest parts of the cat are the palest. The enzyme only really functions on the cooler parts of the cat – the nose, the tips of the ears, the feet, and the tail. These parts turn black, hence the coloration.
And because Siamese coloring is dependent on temperature, if you shave a pale patch of fur and then engineer a way to keep that spot artificially cold (icepacks perhaps) while the fur grows back in, it will grow back in dark. Not to mention annoy the cat, so don’t try this at home.
Indeed. In fact, we have a rareity-a female orange tabby, Buffy. Only one in four hundred orange tabbies will be female. So, my Buffy is pretty unique.
As for white cats with only one blue eye-no, they aren’t generally partially deaf. Our Noel has one brown eye and one blue eye and hears just fine.
And if a Siamese cat has to have a cast or bandage on a limb, the fur will grow in light colored, because the cast holds in the heat.
“Himalayan” also refers to a rabbit coat pattern.
Robert A. Heinlein used to refer to female cats as tabbies, and you’d think that he’d have known better, as he had Persians. I believe that he bred them, as well. Ask Fenris. But the proper term for an adult female unspayed cat is “queen”, and for an adult male unneutered cat is “tom”. However, my adult spayed cat STILL thinks she’s Queen…of this house, anyway.
Now I’m all confused— if having a gene doesn’t mean as much to physical developement as does how (and if) these genes are expressed, what good is a clone?
Green eyed white cats are not deaf because their whiteness is not caused by supressing that color gene that also helps you hear?
Are orange calicos always male or always female? (Tortoiseshells are almost always female-- or a mutant male. Right?)