Every month we provide cat lovers with a magazine packed with useful and
practical information, entertaining features, lots of reader interaction,
and masses of gorgeous cat photographs.
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FEBRUARY 2002
Heres a taste of whats in the February issue, on sale until
February 15th. Ask your book store to order your copy, or better still, take
out a subscription to make sure you never miss an issue.
FEATURES:
More Toes than Most
Why do some cats have more toes than others? ELIZABETH PERRY explores the polydactyly phenomenon.
Silent Witness
ANDREA McHUGH reports on the tragic link between animal abuse and family violence.
Personality Questionnaire
Complete our survey and help the Feline Advisory Bureau gain an insight into
cat behaviour. (You can download this from the FAB web site)
A Hunting He Will Go
THERESA KAUFMAN continues the story of her camping adventures with cats Jimmy and N'Arthur.
Health and Welfare
Understand your indoor cat's needs. Vet SUSAN McKAY suggests ways to keep your cat happy and healthy.
Tumours in Cats
Our regular vet BRADLEY VINER explains all about feline cancers and reports that treatment is progressing in leaps and bounds.
A-Z of Natural Healing
Holistic vet TIM COUZENS has put together a comprehensive guide to a range of alternative remedies.
A Special Kind of Care
THERESA COE explains how fostering a cat can provide benefits not just for the cat, but the carer, too.
Wild Cats Our Pets for the Future?
Behaviourist JOHN BRADSHAW reports that a study on wild cats in zoos suggests that others types of cats may be easy to domesticate.
BREED
Spot-On Cats
Meet the Ocicat, the cat with the beautifully spotted coat that looks wild but is actually an affectionate family pet.
More Toes than Most
Why do some cats have more toes that others? Depending which side of the Pond you live, it's to be bred out or celebrated says ELIZABETH PERRY.
Tiger has an amazing 27 toes. At just nine months old this cutest of kittens,
owned by Gareth Ukrainetz, from Leduc in Alberta, Canada, has been officially
recognised by Guinness World Records as the Cat with the most toes'. Tiger
has seven toes on each front foot, and seven on her left hind foot, but only
six toes on her right hind foot. Most cats have five toes on the front paws
(four toes and one dew claw) and four on each of the hind paws, a total of
18. Tiger has beaten the previous record holder, Twinkle Toes, owned by Gloria
Boensch of Birch Run, Michigan. The three-year-old female has a mere 25 toes.
Tiger was born with a condition called polydactyly (Greek for Omany fingers'),
which is a fairly common mutation in the domestic feline world.
Many toes Polydactyly has affected cats for hundreds of years but was only
scientifically recognised in the mid-1800s. It is an inherited condition in
which a dominant gene causes extra toes to be formed on one or more feet.
Though the condition varies from animal to animal, it will always affect the
front feet and sometimes the back feet as well. The abnormality may simply
be an enlargement of the inside digit into a thumb, (known as a Omitten cat'),
or there may be up to three extra Oentire' toes on the paw. In general, polydactyl
cats are not disabled and have no problems in walking, climbing or jumping
and balance. Because the extra toes are a different length, the cat is unable
to strop the additional claw and it can grow so long that it may actually
grow into the paw pad. Owners must therefore clip the claws regularly. If
there is a persistent problem, the toe may be declawed by a vet, one of the
few circumstances where the operation is allowed in the UK. If two extra toes
are fused together the nail bed will also be fused. This leads to the growth
of one Osuperclaw', which is much stronger and thicker than normal, making
it more lethal for furniture and human flesh! The claw may twist as it grows
and become ingrown. When an extra toe causes repeated problems, it can be
removed in a simple operation.
Hemingway Cats
Writer Ernest Hemingway, a great cat lover, had polydactyl cats among the
50 or so that shared his island. One, Princess Six Toes, became famous and
appeared in the New York Times' and other American magazines. Because of this,
multi-toed cats are often referred to as Hemingway cats. Other famous polydactyl
cats include President Teddy Roosevelt's cat, Slippers. There is a high incidence
of polydactyl cats along the United States' east coast. At one time, 40 per
cent of the original Maine Coon population in New England were polydactyl.
This led to claims that the cats developed extra toes to act as snowshoes!
The most likely explanation is that polydactyl cats were considered lucky
(probably because their large paws meant they were good mousers) and often
taken on as ships' cats. When many of the seamen settled along the US coast
their cats remained as well. There is also a high incidence of polydactyl
cats in south-west England, perhaps for the same reason.
No Show
Polydactyly is generally seen as a fault in show cats and was Obred out'
of Maine Coons, yet in the US efforts are being made to reinstate the condition
for both Maine Coon and Pixie-Bob breeds. New breeds are also being developed
that include multi-toes as part of the breed standard, such as the Hemingway
Sphynx, a hairless polydactyl cat. In the UK, polydactyly is seen as a breed
fault. Frances Peace, secretary of the Governing Council of the Cat Fancy
(GCCF) says: "Additional toes are on our standard list of defects. Though
polydactyl cats can be shown, they would not receive a certificate or a first
prize. Our list of defects applies to all standards of breed. I cannot think
that it's a feature that benefits the cat," she added. Penny Bydlinski,
general secretary of FIFe, (the worldwide cat show/breed body) reveals why
multi-toed cats are banned at Cat Association shows. "To allow such abnormalities
would encourage inbreeding in pedigree cats," she explains. "It
is a fault and polydactyl cats are not allowed to be shown."
Personal Experience
Jane Burton, one of the UK's top animal photographers, has helped with research
into polydactyly in cats. "I was given a rescue moggy in 1993 who was
a polydactyl cat and had 26 toes. I liked her and I decided to mate her with
a Burmese cross. The kittens were Burmese lookalikes and around half of them
were born with extra toes. Jane continued breeding from her polydactyl cats
and kept records of family trees, which she passed onto researcher Dr Susan
Long at Bristol Vet School. "I tried mating two polydactyl cats and their
kittens varied with what extra toes they had," she explains, "though
none of the kittens I bred had as many as the original female. I didn't notice
any problems with the polydactyl cats, but somebody I rehomed one to did say
that the cat caught his feet on the covers of the furniture." Unfortunately,
after four years, Jane was persuaded to part with her last polydactyl female,
putting an end to her breeding programme.
The Genetics
Dr Susan Long is a senior lecturer in reproduction at Bristol Vet School
and is director of the course in genetics. After conducting research into
polydactyly, she is able to explain how it is passed on through the generations.
"The simplest assumption, in the absence of other evidence, is that the
mutation originally occurred in one cat and was passed down through its offspring.
"Polydactyly is caused by an autosomal dominant gene. Through research
we know that if one parent carries one copy of the gene and the other parent
has none, the inherited genes are heterozygous and half the kittens will be
born with polydactyly. If one parent has two copies of the gene (passed down
by one copy from each grandparent) the genes are homozygous and all the kittens
will be born with polydactyly. "It's actually a very interesting gene,"
enthuses Dr Long. "Because there are various manifestations in the way
the toes are formed, how many and on which feet, this suggests it's a main
simple gene with variable expression."