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Wednesday, 6 February 2008

Cat Coats Color Dilution

British Shorthair catCat coats color dilution.

We know that dilution means a watering down of a color. In painting this is achieved by the addition of water to color pigment so that the same amount of color pigment is spread over a wider area. What is happening to the color of a cat's coat when there is color dilution.
Havanna Brown cat
Perhaps a good starting point is to look at the hairs of the coat at a microscopic level in a before and after sequence. There are four basic solid (self in cat fancy language) dense colors: black, cinnamon, chocolate (see the cat right a Havanna Brown) and red (there are some green cats too apparently). Self colored cats carry the non-agouti gene. This is a recessive gene in homozygous form (aa). This allows black pigmentation (the substance is called eumelanin) to be produced throughout the hair as it grows. This is in contrast to the agouti gene, the presence of which results in banding of color in the hair. Taking the self (solid) color of black as a good example, the genotype is aaB-D-. B stands for the browning gene, which in dominant form (signified by a capital B) produces black pigmentation. The capital letter D stands for the dominant dense pigment gene. See black cats.

When the cat coat's color shows dilution it is due to the presence of the two recessive d alleles in the place of the dominant gene D (dd -called maltese dilution after cats imported from Malta in the early years of the cat fancy). This has an affect on the production of pigment granules in the hair. The granules become enlarged and uneven. This creates a dilute appearance. Diluted black produces grey (gray) as we know and in the cat world the color is called blue as it is a blue/grey (see the British Shorthair cat at the top of the post). There are some cats that are only grey - see grey cat breeds. Diluted chocolate becomes lilac, cinnamon becomes fawn and red becomes cream. The eye color remains unchanged.

Dilute cat coats can be further modified by the dilute modifier gene (Dm). This could be called double dilution. This gene only affects dilute cats coats. The diluted black that became blue then takes on a brownish color and is called caramel (hence the term that this gene "caramelizes the color). Lilac becomes taupe and cream becomes apricot. Of course the color white cannot show dilution (see cat coats white).

Solid color
Diluted
double dilution
black
blue
caramel
cinnamon
fawn
?
chocolate
lilac
taupe
red
cream
apricot


Cat Coats Color Dilution - Links:
  1. Dilution affects tabby cats too. See cat coats tabby
  2. You can see the blue color in the British Shorthair by clicking on this link.
  3. The chocolate colored cat above right is a Havana Brown and you can read and see more of her (she is called Fraulein Katz - great name) by clicking on this link.
  4. See a gorgeous black Maine Coon
  5. See a blue point Siamese cat

Photographs: copyright Helmi Flick

Cat Coats Color Dilution - Sources:
  • Messybeast - Sarah Hartwell
  • Wikipedia
  • Beth Hicks
From Cat Coats Color Dilution to Black cats

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