When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: tabby long haired kitten care guide by age

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. What to Consider Before Adopting a Long-Haired Cat - AOL

    www.aol.com/consider-adopting-long-haired-cat...

    Norwegian Forest Cat. Norwegian Forest Cats (a.k.a. skogkatt or forest cat in Norway), are a breed of long-haired domestic cats known for its large size, strong muscular body, and double coat of ...

  3. 32 high-maintenance cat breeds - AOL

    www.aol.com/32-high-maintenance-cat-breeds...

    The breed originates from a wavy-haired kitten birthed by a tortoiseshell feral cat who carried a mutated gene. However, this mutation was different from the one that formed cornish and devon rexes.

  4. Oriental Longhair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oriental_Longhair

    Oriental Longhairs have the same wedge-shaped heads as modern Siamese cats. Oriental Longhairs feature a long, tubular, Oriental-style body with a longer silky coat.The range of possible coat colours includes everything from self-coloured (black, blue, chocolate, lilac, cinnamon, caramel, fawn, red, cream and apricot), tortoiseshell, smoke (silver undercoat), shaded or tipped, tabby or white.

  5. Persian cat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persian_cat

    White and gray Persian cat. The Persian cat, also known as the Persian Longhair, is a long-haired breed of cat characterised by a round face and short muzzle. The first documented ancestors of Persian cats might have been imported into Italy from Khorasan as early as around 1620, but this has not been proven.

  6. Moggy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moggy

    A domestic long-haired cat is a cat of mixed ancestry – thus not belonging to any particular recognized cat breed – possessing a coat of semi-long to long fur. Domestic long-haired cats should not be confused with the British Longhair, American Longhair, or other breeds with "Longhair" names, which are standardized breeds defined by various registries. [8]

  7. Abyssinian cat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abyssinian_cat

    The 2008 study "The Ascent of Cat Breeds: Genetic Evaluations of Breeds and Worldwide Random-bred Populations" by Lipinski et al. conducted at UC Davis by the team led by leading feline geneticist Dr Leslie Lyons found that the Abyssinian has a low level of genetic diversity, a heterozygosity value of 0.45 within a range of 0.34–0.69 for all ...