She is most likely also Siamese, but has a dominant black trait that makes it impossible to see her two toned nature, this means that her mom or dad is black. Can you see shade variations around where the color would normally be different? Also if have you seen her mother and father? If they both look Siamese, then they are both carriers of a recessive gene and she is a double recessive gene carrier.
2006-11-09 10:45:57
·
answer #1
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
A female cat will mate with any number of males and can bear a lot of different coloured kittens. Most of the time the kitten will take after the father. But not always. Siamese & black are very common together. Size has nothing to do with it. Your cat probably has a different father than his brother & sister.
2006-11-09 10:46:54
·
answer #2
·
answered by Enchanted Gypsy 6
·
0⤊
0⤋
Siamese markings do not indicate a purebred cat.
Your cat has siamese(or another "oriental" breed) in it's genepool, probably fairly recent. However, this does not make your cat, or the cats who have siamese markings a siamese cat.
It is also possible for a female cat(perhaps your cat's mother) to breed with more then one male. So even though they were born at the same time, they might have different fathers.
2006-11-09 10:44:22
·
answer #3
·
answered by sabinepd 2
·
0⤊
0⤋
Sounds like the siblings are just color pointed, it doesn't mean that they are siamese. There are sevearal other breeds that have that color point variation i.e. the Birman or Burmeses. They could all be Bumese if they are purebred.
Also it's useful to remember that a Queen (female cat) will can and usually carry the kittens of 2 or more males. They cold be half siblings.
2006-11-09 11:35:30
·
answer #4
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
Don't shout you'll wake the kittens. Your cat could be part Siamese. Cat genetics is complicated. Or mom cat could have had to do with a Siamese tom and another tom that could be the father of your cat.
Wait until kitten is a little older and see if you see any Siamese personality in her. Is she talkative, bossy, high-maintenance? Then she may very well be part Siamese.
2006-11-09 10:53:21
·
answer #5
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
Female cats can carry a litter by more than one male cat. Plus, genetics plays a big part in the litter.
My cat looks Birman, but two of her siblings had Torbey markings (one with a bobtail) and the fourth had that black and white tuxedo look. .
2006-11-09 10:45:48
·
answer #6
·
answered by Laughing Libra 6
·
0⤊
0⤋
My grey tiger stripped office cat use to have kittens and she would have one black one grey and two siamese.
The father may have been siamese.
It is common to see litters like that.
The color point siamese pattern can be found in many litters.
Also the solid black can be found in all siamese litters they are known as oriental shorthairs.
2006-11-09 10:51:49
·
answer #7
·
answered by tlctreecare 7
·
0⤊
0⤋
siamese & orientals are born in the same litters they are the same breed just differant colours havanas are only brown orientals & can also be born in the same litters it is the shape and personality& voice that makes an oriental cat siamese are always a colour point and orientals can be solid colours or tabby or any colour
2006-11-11 12:51:32
·
answer #8
·
answered by sara 2
·
0⤊
0⤋
You have a mutt, just like a mixed breed dog. I have had a mother cat give birth to 5 kittens and they were all different, one tabby, one tiger one black and white, smokey gray, solid white. And the mom was a calico. Go figure huh...
2006-11-09 10:50:20
·
answer #9
·
answered by kgreives 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
The genetics of the Siamese color pattern:
http://www.cat-world.com.au/cat-worldsiamesegenetics.htm
FWIW, we have a color-point (siamese-colored) feral cat that used our back yard for a maternity ward. Before we could catch her, she produced several litters of kittens, with colors as follows:
Litter 1: Four grey tabby kittens. (Neighbors happened to observe momcat mating, and said the father was the biggest grey tabby they had ever seen.)
Litter 2: One grey-and-white male, one tabby tortoiseshell female, one tortie-point dilute colorpoint female (i.e., pastel grey and orange siamese pattern and blue eyes).
Litter 3: One black male. One grey male. One bluepoint (siamese pattern) male. Two colorpoint females, one dilute and one not dilute.
LItter 4: One grey female. One black male. Two bluepoint males.
We finally caught her and had her spayed, so no more kittens from her. But as you can see, she gave birth to some very colorful litters!
2006-11-09 11:03:07
·
answer #10
·
answered by Karin C 6
·
0⤊
0⤋