The Truth about Tabbies: Basic Tabby Genetics
82Introduction
When learning about cat genetics it's probably a wise idea to start where the domestic cat started, with the tabby gene. The tabby gene is an amazingly diverse gene that can cause a variety of coat patterns, the most familiar of which is the striped tiger pattern we can see on many domestic cats, both pure-bred and not.
Tabby comes in four distinct types. There are mackerel tabbies, classical tabbies, ticked tabbies, and spotted. Tabby can also be mixed with other marking genes to create cats that display both (i.e. tabby calicos, pointed tabbies, tabbies with white on their coat.) Below I will describe each.
Mackerel Tabbies
Mackerel tabbies are probably the most familiar type of tabby. These cats are sometimes referred to using the slang term "tiger cats" and are the ones we're used to seeing with stripes lining their body. The stripes are always vertical on the cats' body, ringing the tail, and lining the legs. As with other tabbies these cats can come in just about any color variation but the pattern of the stripes will always remain the same regardless of what color they are. These cats are probably most noted in feral populations but can also be accepted in some of the purebred cats including Siberians, Devon Rexes, Sphynx, Norwegian Forrest Cats, Manx, Munchkins, etc.
Classic Tabbies
Classic tabbies are tabbies whose stripes are thicker and travel horizontally across the cat's body, often swirling and creating spirals and bull's eyes. In the Bengal breed this effect is called Marble or Marbling. It can be found displayed in Bengals, Maine Coons, Turkish Angoras, and several other breeds. It also pops up from time to time in feral or moggy populations (moggy being a borrowed word meaning a mutt cat.) This pattern appears to be the most recessive of the tabby patterns, meaning both parents must at least carry the gene to produce it, unlike the other tabby patterns which are far more dominant. It is much more likely for a litter of mixed kittens to be mackerel patterned (even if neither parent are) then Classically patterned. However Classic tabbies and Mackerel tabbies mix well in breeding programs and don't need to be bred only to their likenesses to reproduce themselves.
Ticked Tabbies
Ticked Tabbies are an ancient and possibly the original domestic tabby variety. They are mostly noted in the Abyssinian, Somali, and Singapura breeds but like the rest of the tabbies they can pop up elsewhere. Ticked tabbies do not have the stripes and spotted coat patterns of the other tabbies. Instead the entire cat will appear to be one uniform color until you are closer to it. Upon closer inspection you can see that each individual hair is banded with two or more colors starting at the root and ending at the tip. This can cause them to have a sandy or salt and pepper-like appearance.
Spotted Tabby
Spotted Tabbies are exactly what they sound like. Instead of stripes these cats sport little spots and sometimes rosettes. This coat pattern can be readily seen in Egyptian Maus, Ocicats, and Bengals. Though it can appear in other breeds and the domestic population they're generally not encouraged in a breeding program unless the breed is known for spots (this keeps showing them a bit easier.) That being said spots are very attractive and some breeders are purposely trying to create them in other breeds. These cats can come in any color but the spots are generally black. Some spotted tabbies can even be black cats with darker black spots on them (this gene being called the Melanistic gene.) There is some debate about whether or not spotted cats are in fact tabbies. Regardless in the Bengal breed they're often bred to Marbled (Classic Tabbies) and usually create more spotted cats (and sometimes more classic tabbies as well.) Further research will need to be done before this puzzle can be solved.
Mixing the Tabby Gene
The tabby gene can be mixed with other coat pattern genes to create a variety of different things. Often times in feral populations tabbies can be seen as white cats with blotches of tabby coloration on them. This is acceptable in some purebreds. When the tabby gene and calico gene display in the same animal you can get a calico with stripes or spots over their normal coloration. When the tabby gene shows up in the pointed breeds it will come out looking like a cat with a light body and darker colored head, ears, paws, and tail but the tail will be ringed and the face will have stripes. This all being said, the tabby gene is an ancient and well documented one that is likely never to become unpopular. It is the perfect gene to study when being introduced to the big and wonderful world of cat genetics.
For More Articles by Theophanes...
vote upvote downshareprintflag
- Useful (2)
- Funny
- Awesome (1)
- Beautiful (1)
- Interesting (1)
CommentsLoading...
Excellent article. I have a tabby / Siamese cross. She's grey tabby in colour and siamese in shape, intelligence and behaviour. Well, except she's not inclined towards a foul temper.
Agreed with PattiM. Our best ever cat was that same cross (tabby father / Siamese mother). She was a beautiful combination: general tabby good nature, with Siamese intelligence.
Informative article, thank you! I had a 20 pound cat who seemed to be a bigger breed. I was shocked when I saw a norwegian forest cat because my baby had the same structure as one. Is it possible for a regular heinz 57 tabby to have any norwegian? The vet wasn't too worried about his weight and we always just called him a domestic short hair. Any opinions?
P.S- R.I.P Chester, you're still the one
Can anybody tell me if a classic tabbies markings are going to get darker?
i have a siberian cat named jack i couldent find out what kind of cat he was until i found this website :)
Is it possible for my cat to be part Egyptian Mau? He's about 20 pounds, 3 years old, has spotted markings, extra skin flap under hind legs, shakes his tail when he's excited, plays fetch, and has black lined eyes. etc.
Love your cat Hub...really enjoyed it...very informative.. thanks
I love cats, I've always had one (at least) since I've been a kid. This had been a very good read, I'm remembering all the tabby's and trying to remember exactly how their stripes were. Thanks for the information!
hey i enjoyed my visit to your cat hub..i have 2 cats..one ginger absynnian and one gray stripped tabby..thanks for the information :)
I've been looking all over the web for a breed that would explain my kitten's coat; she is five months old, 3lbs 9ozs, and is both striped AND spotted. On her left side, she has the distinctive cinnamon bun swirl, but on her right side she is striped with no whorls. Her chin, chest, and a thin strip down the middle of her belly are white but the rest of her tummy is spotted and one of her paw pads is spotted as well. I'm assuming she's tabby but it seems like she's a mix of mackerel, spotted, and classic. Is this possible?
Haha... that was helpful! Her stipes are horizontal on her legs but her stipes on the side are vertical. On closer inspection, the parts of her coat that are not stiped, spotted, or pure white are actually ticked white, gold, and black!
I have a tabby that i've been trying to figure out what her actual breed is. She's got the loyalty and speed of an Egyptian Mau and the 'flap of skin' by it's hind legs and stomach. She's short Tabby with cheetah spots not stripes except on the tail her head is smaller than her body
She lays with me and has never taken to anyone else refuses to be touched or held by another ever since she was a kitten.. everything that internet says leads to her being a Mau...
how ever Tabby is not a breed. It is a color of their fur.
THIS IS SO AWESOME! AND THE KITTIES ARE CUTE AND CUDDLY!
The Ragdoll munchkin is beautiful!
Wow! This is by far the best of all cat pages I've seen :D. I've learned so much about cats in general, and what I have learned about my own dear sweet Georgie helps a lot! His father is half-Siamese and half of some sort of Tabby, and his mother was a mixture of some different types of TabbyCat.... Georgie has a small, pointed head, a large 16 pound body-particularly large in his haunches, has these flaps of skin behind his legs that my neighbour told me were called "dew claws", he is bright orange in colour, with Ginger eyes (more green in the sunlight, but mysteriously close to his fur colour!)....Georgie has some faint Bengal spotting in his hind area, and Makerel stripes on the rest of him; he looks like a hybrid Tiger-Sphynx! He has nose-to-forehead stripes and cottony-white paws and really big ears (he looks like he's grown into his ears, but they are still quite .... big!) He has rings on his tail, which has a kink at the end of it.......something which I have read that is an undesirable Siamese trait that is being "bred out". My baby is so cuddly and affectionate at night, and just loves to sleep not just with, but ON my kids or myself! He is gentle, and communicates by staring and meowing....if that doesn't work though, he nips us:( He also loves to play fetch, and purrs REALLY loud when he is happy! He sounds like a buzz-saw. He has been neutered, but there seems to be a young feral female cat who is interested in him!!?! They hang out every evening, she rowling and in heat, and he relaxing on his table in our backyard! Poor girlfriend! She calls for him every night, he hangs around outside, but hasn't a clue as to what she really wants! Georgie has also befriended a family of cats born to a neighbourhood feral; he used to call out to them every evening at dinnertime, and they'd come, and Georgie would share his food with them.... not common territorial male cat behaviour! He also let them play in "his" yard....As the feral kittens grew though, he let ALL of the males know it was time to leave and find their own space- all except for one black&white male that my kids named "Dice":) So Dice is Georgie's buddy for some reason, and he has some sort of "understanding" (?) with his lady-friend /:) Watching Georgie's social activities beats the heck out of TV! Of course I have a life of my own, but my darling fur-ball has such a specialplace in my heart
I have a cute kitty =)
I just acuired a lovely black shelter kitten that upon our first view was solid black; but I've come to find that she has a very subtle black on black tabby pattern. It's not quite a black smoke, as the stripes are shiny jet black alternating with a duller charcoal-y ruddy black. The undercoat and coat close to the skin is more of a mousy charcoal color than white. It's quite handsome though.
Hi, Thanks for informing me. I am a little confused though, I have a 7month old kitten who is a tabby. I am trying to find out what type he is, to me i thought he was a Mackerel although i think he could be a classic (marabled). He has one very long stripe going down his back and he has markings like bullets that spirel in, is sounds like a classic to me, although some things about a mackerel he has. Any way can you help me? we don't know what the parents were cause we resuced them, all we know is he had 2 brother who looked the same, and also a sister who is completely black (we rescued her too). thanks for yo time
Thanks for the information! I am on a "quest", as some people call it, to learn about cats. I already have two, but my grandmother is thinking about getting one, and I was looking up breeds. I think a tabby would be best for her. Thanks so much for the info! ^w^
Thank you so much for your informative page. Had two kittens dumped at our place this summer and have been intrigued by their unusual markings. The grey tabby male has the cinnamon bun swirls, which I had never seen before, green eyes, and a bushy tail. The white female has blue eyes, faint grey tabby markings in a Siamese pattern, and an extra toe on one forefoot. We assume they are siblings despite their completely different markings. Vet thought they were about 6-8 weeks old when dumped. have turned out to be the best cats ever, despite the occasional half-eaten frog left in the kitchen.
They're all quite amazing. I enjoyed the tabby tale and no matter which type they may be, they're all loveable!
I adopted a kitten that is exhibiting the look and behaviors of a Mau......she has big ears, a wide-eyed, worried look, she is fast and fearless, loves water, and most notably has the tail twitching common to the mau. I also have a calico tortie to compare her to and the differences are striking. My calico is dreamy-eyed and stand-offish....she likes attention, she just doesn't want you to actually TOUCH her, where the baby jumps on my chest and rubs herself all over my face.....the baby is very affectionate. Additionally, my calico has a pretty normal "Mrrrrowwow"-type of meow and the baby sort of "chirps", also like the mau. I know their personalities make them different, but their differences go beyond just their personalities and difference in age. Is there any way, short of genetic testing (which i wouldn't do to her)to be sure if my baby is a mau or a cross-breed?
im am 13 and i think i have a spotted tabby but im not sure..... so are they rare in a sense?
What would happen if you cross a maine coon with a siberian. would it make the maine coon less allergenic?
HELLO, I CURRENTLY HAVE TWO KITTENS THAT JUST HIT 4 MONTHS, AND 4 1/2 MONTHS. MY MALE IS A MARBLED TABBY, MY FEMALE IS A TINY CALICO. MY MALE IS SET TO BE FIXED IN TWO WEEKS, BUT MY FEMALE WENT INTO HEAT ALREADY. NEVER WOULD I OF EXPECTED AT THEIR AGES THAT A SEXUAL ACT COULD TAKE PLACE.WHEN WE HEARD THE CRY AND 1ST SEEN THEM WE THOUGHT "OH THE REGULAR WRESTLING AND PLAYING OF KITTENS", A CLOSER LOOK PROVED US TOTALLY WRONG!!! I HAVE THEM IN DIFFERNT ROOMS BUT I'M SCARED THAT IT'S TOO LATE. THE LAST THING I EVER WANTED TO DO IS ADD TO THE OVER POPULATION OF KITTENS. I AM SO AFRAID BECUASE MY FEMALE IS ONLY AROUND 3 LBS. WHAT CAN I DO???
My cat just had an orange female kitten :D :D :D
i love cats i just want to skwees one how about u i can not have one that is so mean i can not have one when i see a cat i have to say come her kitty cat i us to have one but it ran away and peaple found it and they selled it i was so mad i just wanted to jump on them and hit them but i didn't for some resinso goog by .
Beware and congrats! I too had an orange female, however at 4 wks she started panting when playing with her sibs for short periods of time. I took her to the vet and the majority of her abdominal organs were located in her pericardial sac (sac around the heart). I managed to get her to 4mos so the surgeon could attempt to fix her but we lost her anyway. As you know genetics can be fickle so take any sign of abnormality to your vet for a consult. Good Luck!! Hope all is well.
Our tabby cat has just had six kittens, three black, two tabby (like the mother) and one that has a black body but a tabby head. Have you ever heard of a cat with this colouration? What could have caused it?













moonlake Level 7 Commenter 4 years ago
Enjoyed my visit to your Hub. Love cats.