I posted a lot of links about this on someone else’s question about bicolor cats. I think her pattern may be harlequin, but I am no expert in this. I think your girl would qualify as bicolor/ red and white which means she has piebaldism. View attachment 389690Īnd my little guy being silly and losing his head in the middle of a nap: View attachment 389691Ĭlick to expand.Beautiful kitties I have a ginger tabby tux, Merlin, who I rescued. View attachment 389688 View attachment 389689 View attachment 389692Įxcuse my "dirty" hands I had been spray painting and it took days to get it all off. ![]() Here's a couple of pictures for fun the tiny 3 week old kitten in my hands is the buff female at only 3 weeks and still with mommy, plus my own two kitties at various ages up to 4.5 months. So she's a bit of a rare cat altogether, seems like? Anywhoo, I'm just talkin' and having fun thinking about these things. Plus another recessive gene is needed for it to become female. From what I understand, buff orange is still orange and there must be a recessive gene in place for it to become buff or pale orange instead of bright orange. There was also a buff orange female in the same litter that my kittens came from. So: Is a cat who is very mixed with white still considered an orange cat, and would it fall in that category of 80% chance of being male? Is there a line drawn somewhere, with how much white will make it no longer fit that category? Or does it only apply to the solid orange cats? ![]() But I also have a female who's orange with a lot of white. According to what I'm finding on google, 80% of orange cats are males, and I do have a fully orange male.
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