Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - What's the difference between cat breeds?

What's the difference between cat breeds?

First, look at the breed characteristics of cats, such as short round face and stubby limbs, blue eyes of bag cats, ears folded forward by folding cats, and flat nose of Garfield cats.

Second, look at the color of cat hair. For example, the hair of a blue cat is gray-blue, and the hair lines on a tabby cat are distributed like those on a tiger.

The first kind of cat is English short-haired cat.

British short-haired cat, referred to as English cat, is a purebred version of traditional British native cat. Its body is short and fat, with thick hair. His face is wide, too. It feels fleshy and cute. Generally, the price of short English is around 1500 to 5000. Of course, the better the appearance, the more expensive the price. British short cats can also be divided into blue cats, blue and white cats, gold gradient, silver gradient, silver spots, ivory and pure white according to their coat color.

The second kind of cat is American shorthair cat.

American short-haired cats, commonly known as short hair, have more than 30 colors, more than British short-haired cats. American short-haired cat, also known as American short-haired tiger striped cat, is a breed cultivated by Americans by improving European cats and native cats in the American continent. It is also a traditional breed of American domestic cats. According to the coat color, it can be divided into short silver tiger spot, short brown tiger spot, short silver tiger spot and good white tiger spot. Tiger spots and fishbones refer to the flower patterns of this variety. Silver and brown are the colors of this variety.

The third kind of cat is the Scottish folded-ear cat.

The most prominent feature of Scottish folded-ear cats is their bent ears. Many people think it is cute because of the folded ear cat, but it is a fatal feature for the folded ear cat. Scottish folded-ear cat, originally found in Scotland, has wrinkles on its cartilage, which makes its ears bend forward. Later, experts found that the cat suffered from congenital orthopedic diseases and often used independent posture to relieve pain when necessary. In order not to make this feature of cats more prominent, Scottish folded-ear cats usually cross with other breeds.

The fourth kind of cat is a bag cat.

Although the hair on the doll cat is medium-long, it is smooth and not tangled, and its tail is furry, and it often wears a "scarf" around its neck, which looks elegant.