Scottish Fold
The Scottish Fold is a breed of cat with
a natural mutation to its ears. The ear cartilage contains a
fold so the ears bend forward and down towards the front of
their head.
The original Scottish Fold was a long-haired white-haired barn
cat named Susie, who was found at a farm near Coupar Angus in
Perthshire Scotland in 1961. Susie's ears had an unusual fold
in their middle, making her resemble an owl.
When Susie had kittens, two of them were born with folded
ears, and one of the siblings was acquired by William Ross, a
neighbouring farmer and cat-fancier.
Ross registered the breed with the Governing Council
of the Cat Fancy in Great Britain and started to breed Scottish
Fold kittens with the help of geneticist Pat Turner.
The breeding program produced 76 kittens in the first
three years - 42 with folded ears and 34 with straight ears.
The conclusion from this was that the ear mutation is due to a
simple dominant gene. If one parent provides the gene for
straight ears, and one parent provides the gene for folded
ears, the kittens will be Folds.
The breed was not accepted for showing in Great Britain and
Europe as it was felt that they would be extremely prone to ear
problems such as infection, mites and deafness, but the folds
were exported to America and the breed continued to be
established there using crosses with British Shorthair and the
American Shorthair.
Scottish Folds can be either long or short-haired, and they
may have any coat colour combination except for Siamese-style
points. Pointed Folds have been bred but they are not eligible
for showing. The original cats only had one fold in their ears,
but due to selective breeding they have increased the fold to a
double or triple crease that causes the ear to lie totally flat
against the head. Scottish Folds are, typically, good-natured
and placid, and are known for sleeping on their backs.
There is one medical problem that has been found to be related
to Scottish Fold breeding. If both parents have folded ears,
their kittens will be extremely prone to developing a painful
degenerative joint disease that fuses the tail, ankles and
knees.
This condition also affects Scottish folds with one
copy of the fold gene, to a lesser degree, and is the reason
the breed is not accepted by the Governing Council of the Cat
Fancy and the Fédération Internationale Féline.
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