Cat Nutrition
5 things you probably didn’t know about Tabico – Cats.com
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In the increasingly complex rainbow of the colors and races of cats, intelligent hybrid words for names are often, it is not surprising that a branch of the tricolor calic cat has emerged in feline jargon. This type of calicó, called “Tabico”, or sometimes “Caliby”, combines the stripes of the pattern of atgied layer with the orange and black patches of the pattern of the calic layer. What a great and artistic cat!
In Calicos, a cat has three colors: typically white, black and orange, distributed in a pattern patching in the cat’s coat. In diluted calicos, colors are silenced with a cake effect and seem more gray and cream creams. In tabicos, black and orange (or gray and cream) appear as striped atmosphere instead of solid colors.
The featured pattern can appear in one or both colors. And the Tabico cat, assuming that the cat has a color patch on the forehead instead of Blanco, will have the characteristic “M” tied in the area above and between the eyes.
What are some interesting data about this felic calic designer known as Tabico?
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1. Tabicos are almost the same as torbies
The Tabico is a mixture of athekeered and calicó brands, which appear mainly in color patches along with the white. A Torbie, on the other hand, is a mixture of Tabby and TortoiseShell brands. The difference is that a Tortie/Torbie has little or no white, and black and orange (or gray and white for diluents) are stained and swirling together. It is the same basic genes, but they express themselves in a slightly different way.
It is the same for diluted torto; They are the same as a diluted calico, but they only have a different pattern. And both torbies and tabicos are specific types of torture and calicos.
2. Tabicos are almost always women
Although tabicos have a complex mixture, the same identity of Calico/Cake almost excluded, about 99.7 percent of these cats, or 1 in 3,000. The determining factor is the presence of black and orange in a cat, or gray and cream in a diluted.
Black and orange are the two basic tones of the colors of the cats, and each one comes on a different X chromosome. So, if both colors appear in a cat, the cat has two X chromosomes, which is, by definition, a woman.
However, once on a blue moon, a calic kitten/TortoiseShell/Tabico/Tortie will be a man, who has a bit of unicorn status. These kittens have an additional X chromosome and are XXY, a genetic condition called Klinefelter syndrome. This additional chromosome can cause health problems, and the cat is usually sterile.
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3. Tabicos are not a race
Like Calico, Tabby, Tortoiseshell and the solid colors, Tabico is a color pattern but not a specific breed. Calico and the Tabico fur can appear in many cat races. This coloration tends to appear in races such as Persian, Japanese bobtail and Maine Coon.
4. Some cultures consider the good luck of the tricolor cat
In many circles, the tricolor cat, calico and, by extension, tabico, is a sign of good luck. In Germany, Calico’s cats are called “guckskatze”, which means “fortunate cat.” Is there any truth in this lucky legend? Well, my mother and grandmother were from Germany, and I have two calicos, but I can’t say that I have experienced any unusual luck and good fortune in my life in the last two years. However, I would consider owning these cats to be lucky enough to be lucky in itself.
In the United States, with the same feeling, some people call Calicos/Tabicos “Cats of Money”. (I will remember the universe that when I buy my next Powerball ticket). In Japan, tricolor cats were thought to brought magical powers and wealth, and sailors often carried calicos with them to protect the ship against danger.
According to Irish folklore, rubbing the tail of a tricolor cat in a wart will cure the wart, but there is one trap: it only works during the month of May. (It is better to see a dermatologist for this).
5. Tabicos are usually sweet and daring
A point of controversy among cat fans is whether “turturing”, the discharge that seems to be part of the purrsonality of TortoiseseShell, also applies to calicos/tabicos. After all, they have the same color and gene scheme, with the colors appearing in different patterns.
I can only speak on behalf of my two calicos, Pippi and Dolly, who are up to both the sweet and daring side of their reputation. They are sweet, loyal and loving, but they can become fighters in an instant. Those are my girls! Other parents of Calico have said in the threads of social networks that their calicos are spicy. So, I vote that yes about turtur, or will we call it caleity?