I Love Wild Cat Hybrids
There are a number of hybrids between various felid species. This article deals with hybrids between the smaller felid species and those between smaller felids and Panthera species. For hybrids between two Panthera species (lions, tigers, jaguars and leopards) see Panthera hybrid.
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Bristol : domestic Cat / Margay (Leopardus wiedii)
Chausie aka Stone Cougar : domestic Cat / Jungle Cat aka swamp-lynx (Felis chaus)
Cheetoh : Ocicat / Bengal
Jungle-Bob : Pixie-bob / Jungle Cat aka swamp-lynx (F. Chaus)
Jungle-Curl : Hemingway Curl aka American Curl / Jungle Cat aka swamp-lynx (Felis chaus)
Machbagral and/or Viverral : domestic Cat / Fishing Cat (Prionailurus viverrinus)
Pantherette : Pixie-bob / Asian Leopard Cat (Prionailurus bengalensis)
Punjabi : (domestic Cat with Indian Desert-Cat aka Asiatic Wildcat (Felis s. ornata)
Safari : (domestic Cat with Geoffroy's Cat (Leopardus geoffroyii)
Savannah and/or Ashera : (domestic Cat with Serval (Leptailurus serval)
Serengeti : Oriental / Bengal
Toyger : domestic Cat / Bengal
Ussuri (cat) : domestic Cat / Amur Asian Leopard Cat (Prionailurus b. euptailura)
Caracat (proposed name) : Domestic Cat / Caracal (accidental Hybridisation, Moscow Zoo, 1998)
Oncicat (proposed name) : Domestic Cat / Oncilla (Little Spotted Cat/Tiger Cat)
Domestic Cat / Black-footed Cat (F. nigripes)
Domestic Cat / Rusty-spotted Cat (Prionailurus rubiginosus) (wild-occurring Hybrids, India)
Servical
A male caracal crossed with a female serval is called a caraval.
Margay/Oncilla Hybrid
Fernand Mery "The life, history and magic of the cat" 1967
Marlot
Newsletter, Long Island Ocelot Club, May 1977
Blynx (Lynxcat)
In August 2003, two wild-occurring hybrids between wild Canadian lynx and bobcats were confirmed by DNA analysis in the Moosehead region of Maine, USA. Three hybrids were identified in northeastern Minnesota. These were the first confirmed hybrids outside of captivity. Mitochondrial DNA studies showed them all to be the result of matings between female lynx and male bobcats. A male lynx-bobcat hybrid was trapped in 1998, radio-collared and released only to die of starvation (possibly the radio collar hindered its hunting). The female hybrid was fertile. In November 2003, a spotted lynxcat was observed in Illinois, 500 miles from normal lynx territory but may have been an escaped hybrid pet.
The hybrids closely resembled bobcats with larger bodies and smaller feet, but had some lynx-like features: long ear tufts and an almost completely black-tipped tail. The Canadian lynx is a protected species in 14 US states constituting the southern part of its historic range, but the hybrids are not protected and are shot by hunters. Some of the odd-looking cats may be colour morphs of either bobcat or lynx rather than hybrids. This poses the danger that protected lynx are being killed.
Euro-Chaus
Jungle Lynx
Ocelot-Cougar Hybrids
In September 1989, the 3.5 year old cougar appeared to be pregnant, but was assumed to have miscarried. In May 1990 she gave birth to 3 hybrid cubs (2 males, 1 female) which all died within a day due to lack of maternal care. In October 1990 she produced 2 cubs (1 male, 1 female) which were hand-reared, but all died between 5 and 12 days old due to lack of suitable milk formula. In 1991 3 female hybrid cubs were born, but failed to survive. In 1992, a fourth litter was born, but were eaten by the mother (probably the fate of the 1989 litter).
The body size of the cubs was intermediate between cougar cubs and ocelot cubs. Their spot patterns bore more resemblance to the ocelot than to the juvenile pattern of a cougar. The markings were similar to that of an ocelot but with less continuous on the back and with less pronounced throat/belly markings. The backs of their legs were darker and unspotted (a cougar-like trait) and they had ringed tails.
A subsequent cub born in French Guiana apparently survived. The adult female ocelot/cougar hybrid is shown at L'Ocelot-Puma
G Dubost & J Royere in 1993 in "Zoo Biology 12".
Domestic Cat & hybridization
Confirmed domestic Cat/ Felid Hybrids. Some pairings have given rise to more than one breed developed under different registries and bred to different standards for appearance and different percentages of wild felid genes. They are therefore different breeds, not synonyms.
Bengal : domestic Cat / Asian Leopard Cat (Prionailurus bengalensis)
Bristol (cat) : domestic Cat / Margay (Leopardus wiedii)
Chausie : domestic Cat / Jungle Cat aka Swamp Cat (Felis chaus)
Stone Cougar : domestic Cat / Jungle Cat aka Swamp Cat (Felis chaus)
Cheetoh : Bengal / Ocicat
Jungle-Bob : Pixie-bob / Jungle Cat aka Swamp Cat (F. Chaus)
Jungle-Curl : Hemingway Curl (polydactyl x American Curl) / Jungle Cat aka Swamp Cat (Felis chaus)
Machbagral and/or Viverral : domestic Cat / Fishing Cat (Prionailurus viverrinus)
Pantherette : Pixie-bob / Asian Leopard Cat (Prionailurus bengalensis)
Punjabi : domestic Cat /Indian Desert-Cat (a variety of Asiatic Wildcat) (Felis s. ornata)
Safari (cat) : domestic Cat / Geoffroy's Cat (Leopardus geoffroyii)
Savannah : domestic Cat (including Bengal) / Serval (Leptailurus serval)
Ashera : domestic Cat / Serval (Leptailurus serval) + Asian Leopard Cat (Prionailurus bengalensis)
Serengeti : Bengal / Oriental (solid-coloured Siamese)
Toyger : domestic Cat / Bengal
Ussuri (cat): domestic Cat / Amur Asian Leopard Cat (Prionailurus b. euptailura)
Domestic Cat / Caracal (accidental, Moscow Zoo, 1998)
Domestic Cat / Oncilla (Little Spotted Cat/Tiger Cat)
Domestic Cat / Black-footed Cat (F. nigripes)
Domestic Cat / Rusty-spotted Cat (Prionailurus rubiginosus) (wild occurring Hybrids, India)
Hybrid breed / wild Felid :
Afro-Chausie (proposed name) : Chausie / African Wildcat (F. s. lybica)
Euro-Chausie : Chausie / European Wildcat (F. s. silvestris)
Scottie-Chausie (proposed name) : Chausie / Scottish Wildcat (F. s. grampia)
Attempted or unconfirmed Hybrids:
Mandalan Jaguar (proposed name) : Domestic Cat / Jaguarundi
Domestic Cat / Canada Lynx
Domestic Cat / Bobcat (Felis rufus)
Domestic Cat / Pallas Cat (Otocolobus manul)
Domestic Cats have not been hybridized with Ocelots. It is not possible to create Hybrids between domestic Cats and Big Cats. Offspring of Ocelot female (offspring born August 2007), believed to be sired by domestic Bengal male await genetic analysis.
The Jaguarundi Curl is not a Jaguarundi hybrid. It is a short-legged domestic breed developed from REFR's Highland Lynx breed.
Ocecat/Ocicat
The Ocecat or Ocicat is not a hybrid between domestic cat and Ocelot. It is derived from Siamese and Abyssinian domestic breeds of cat and gets its name from its markings which resemble the spotted markings of an Ocelot.
American Lynx, Desert Lynx, Alpine Lynx, Highland Lynx
The Desert Lynx and American Lynx breeds were originally claimed as bobcat hybrids with around 12.5% wild genes. In spite of their bobcatty appearance, DNA testing failed to detect Bobcat marker genes and these cats are now considered wholly domestic for the purposes of ownership, cat fancy registration, import and export. This parallels the case of the PixeBob in that foundation cats in the breed were speculated to be bobcat-domestic cat hybrids. The "Lynx" breed group expanded with the derivative Alpine Lynx and Highland Lynx breeds.
Rare and Exotic Feline Registry
American Mystery Cat
Marketed as a natural hybrid between an unidentified cryptozoological mystery cat and a domestic cat, these are ordinary black domestic cats. The images of the supposed original mystery cat hybrids turned out to be retouched images of black leopard cubs and, in one case, a photograph of a melanistic Geoffroy's cat in an animal sanctuary and which played no part in the breeding program. Neither the body of the claimed mystery cat nor any of the claimed original hybrids were presented for blood testing or independent scientific examination.
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- sad truth of hybrid cats sad truth of hybrid cats Jan 20, 2008 @ 1:40 am
- Important note about domestic cats & hybridization: Consider what goes into the development, and what happens to the many generations before the birth of a 'healthy' animal, tame enough to be a good pet. Is it worth it?
http://www.bigcatrescue.org/hybrids.htm
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- Ecko Ecko Dec 24, 2007 @ 1:48 am
- There is a lot of good information here. It must have taken a while to gather it all. I enjoyed it!
Ecko at www.agentcats.com
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- Jim Rodgers Jim Rodgers Dec 23, 2007 @ 10:04 am
- Governments brought a stop to interested civilian enthusiast from keeping small wild felid species from being bred & kept in captivity. This law hurts the species more than it helps. Well meaning individuals that hybridize & produce off spring for the pet trade take pressure off wild populations.
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Copyright (c) 2007 Cinnamon.
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