![]() Just make sure the tabby doesn't look too much like two types at once. Your tabby can be as detailed as you want it. Just google these types of tabbies and you'll get real live examples on real cats. Your Sindow should not look like this! The tabby is over the marking. Tabby always goes under all other markings and modifiers like roan Face, legs and tail must show distinct tabby striping. Lighter underside may show tabby markings. Body when viewed from top to be free from noticeable spots, stripes or blotches, except for darker dorsal shading. It shouldn't look like random slashes either We demonstrate that at least three different loci control the coat markings of the domestic cat. TICKED TABBY PATTERN: body hairs to be ticked with various shades of marking color and ground color. ![]() Mackerel Tabby should not look like the tiger marking. 1) Barred Ticked Tabby (Tata) 2) Unpatterned or Patternless Ticked Tabby (TaTa) 3) Broken Classic Tabby (mcmc, tata) Row 2. Tabby is not a marking! It is not black over the base Cat Genetics Guide: Non-Hybridized Tabby Patterns Chart. These are just a handful of shortcuts to identify a tabby cat, but they're not an exact set of rules: some ticked tabby, for example, don't have any leg and tail banding. (this first is kind of two don'ts in one) Torso, leg and tail banding The chin and the belly are often white or a paler color than the rest of the body. I've used two grey tones for these examples, but the darker color is always substituted for the base color of your Sindow while the lighter grey part is the diluted part. So, breeding a Mackerel Tabby x Mackerel Tabby will not mean that you get Mackerel Tabby. Group 1 x Group 2 will result in 60% group 1, 40% group 2 and the actual marking will be rolled randomly from there. If you're breeding a group 1 marking by another group 1 marking, you'll only be able to get group 1 markings. The types don't strictly pass down either, they are produced in a semi-random manner. ![]() The type of tabby will be stated in the Pheno, but it will not be shown genetically. It's not a 'marking' that goes over the coat, but a modifier that dilutes parts of the coat, leaving others the base color. Tabby is a gene that affects the coat like dun.
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