Lynx point Siamese cats have also been described as tabby Siamese cats but not by people who breed and show cats, I suspect.
The point is that cat breeders on both sides of the Atlantic were not satisfied with breeding the standard Siamese cat. Breeders like to expand the range and push the boundaries of cat breeding.
In respect of the Siamese cat this meant selective breeding to change the pointing to a whole new range of colors and even patterns. Original Siamese cat pointing is of a solid color: dark brown (seal), blue, lilac and chocolate colors. That should have been enough but no..
Selectively breeding in the tabby and agouti gene resulted in broken pointing; pointing with mackerel strips (mackerel tabby). See tabby cats.
Breeders call these cats Lynx Point Siamese. The word "lynx" is simply a fancy word to make the cat more interesting. There is no connection with lynx wild cats except they too are tabby cats as are many (all?) wildcats.
OK that's enough words. Here is a picture of a lynx point Siamese cat.
This cat is a traditional Siamese cat. Some cat associations would not describe this cat as a Siamese. I wouldn't either. The CFA calls this cat a Lynx Colorpoint Shorthair.
The point is that cat breeders on both sides of the Atlantic were not satisfied with breeding the standard Siamese cat. Breeders like to expand the range and push the boundaries of cat breeding.
In respect of the Siamese cat this meant selective breeding to change the pointing to a whole new range of colors and even patterns. Original Siamese cat pointing is of a solid color: dark brown (seal), blue, lilac and chocolate colors. That should have been enough but no..
Selectively breeding in the tabby and agouti gene resulted in broken pointing; pointing with mackerel strips (mackerel tabby). See tabby cats.
Breeders call these cats Lynx Point Siamese. The word "lynx" is simply a fancy word to make the cat more interesting. There is no connection with lynx wild cats except they too are tabby cats as are many (all?) wildcats.
OK that's enough words. Here is a picture of a lynx point Siamese cat.
Traditional Lynx Point Siamese Cat Photo by gsloan |
I have such a cat.Alot of these pic. look exactly like down to the tail and stripes.I thought at first who took his pic.His name is Asher.Right now he turned 1 June of last yr. He's getting darker as he ages.Boy is he growing.Kids say he has a racoon tail
ReplyDeleteMy e-mail is baconup@cox.net
ReplyDeleteMy cat looks exactly like this only she has a bobbed tail. Any ideas?
ReplyDeleteSorry for being so slow in publishing your comment. I get so few of them!!
DeleteI thought I posted a comment already but here goes again I guess. LOL. MY cat looks exactly like this breed only she's got a bobbed tail. And she's very mean to pretty much everyone even me at times. Growling,hissing,jumping out at or biting if she gets to.
ReplyDeleteKelly, how did you acquire your cat. It sort of sounds as if you might be living with a bobcat! A wild cat species. Tell me how you adopted your cat. She might be a random bred tabby who is not socialised. The bobbed tail is due to a genetic mutation and it can happen to any cat. Your cat need not be a cat breed.
DeleteWell I got her from some friends in Lebanon Oregon , I gues she is American bobcat and Siamese so you were kinda right, except bobcats the wild ones can’t procreate with domestic cats or id think she was that sort she so mean! I love her tho she’s got personality like nothing I’ve seen!
ReplyDeleteIt sounds like she is amazing. Thanks for responding.
DeleteI thought I’d posted a photo of her to show but zi don’t see it! Omgosh where did it go then? Lol
DeleteSend me a pic in an email and I will include it in the article: mjbmeister@gmail.com
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