Cat inbreeding causes what is described as “inbreeding depression” which is another term for general weakness. Robinson’s Genetics for Breeders and Veterinarians provides a list of signs of inbreeding depression which are as follows:
- There may be a decline in birth weight. The kittens may be small, thin or lethargic.
- The kittens may demonstrate developmental problems. There may be poor growth in later life and below standard adult individuals.
- The average litter size may be reduced. There may be an increase in the number of stillborn or abnormal kittens in litters.
- Reproductive performance may be negatively affected. The male my demonstrate a reluctance to copulate. The female may show a reluctance to come into heat. Either sex may show partial sterility.
- At any stage of development there may be a greater proneness to illness. For example, a regular appearance of cancer in younger animals. There may be a loss of immunological diversity which can cause significant losses of cats or kittens to the same disease.
- There may be physical signs such as asymmetry in the face, crooked noses, uneven eye size or alignment and misaligned jaws. Does coat pattern symmetry mean good health?
To this list I would add one more: a lack of intelligence or poor cognitive function. I have seen this in inbred British Shorthair cats. It is noticeable. The cat is dull and slow moving.
Only one of the above examples may be present. There may be a small but detectable deterioration in a number of the above symptoms. Inbreeding depression may come on gradually. It may affect some individuals and not others.
The point is this: some cats do carry deleterious genes and these deleterious genes may make their presence felt due to inbreeding.
There is an interesting story on the Internet today which is essentially about the inbreeding of Persian cats. Somebody who had purchased three Persian cats gave up on them and abandoned them. They were dumped outside an animal shelter (Woodside Animal Welfare Trust) in the UK.
The founder of the shelter, Carole Bowles, says that over the last 10 years they have had Persian cats dumped at the gate at least once a year. It would seem that local buyers are buying from the same breeder who is inbreeding her cats.
The founder of the shelter adds that on every occasion the Persian cats have had health issues which she says are commonly related to inbreeding or poor breeding. Sometimes the cats are so unwell that they have lost their fight for life. Other times they can be restored to reasonable health and adopted out. Inherent defects in inbred Persians cannot be cured such as tear duct overflow and poor breathing.
In this story of Persian cat abandonment, the cats arrived fearful and in bad health but the shelter did a very nice job and they are now less fearful and looking for attention. However, people who donate to a cat shelter should not be picking up the pieces left behind by irresponsible cat breeders who inbreed their cats while focusing on appearance. It is ironic that so often inbred Persian cats look weedy, ill, ugly and fragile. They do not look like healthy pet cats. So much for breeding for appearance.
When cat inbreeding is bad the “product” is ugly and the business is ugly too.
Here is a chart indicating in the degree of inbreeding in purebred cats:
Story source: devonlive.com.
I have a tabby cat named Margo we found outside. When she was a kitten she had a pretty bad eye infection, which did eventually go away but her left eye has a blue layer over it now. We have had ther for probably 2 years now and she still is no bigger than a 6 or 7 month old cat. She is also just kind of dumb. Not to be mean, she is a very sweet cat, but she doesn’t “cat” very well. Too afraid to jump up to higher surfaces, doesn’t seem to know how to retract her claws, still doesn’t pick up on cues from us as owners, and all of a sudden she has started pooping in random spots around the house. I wonder if she’s inbred or maybe that eye infection as a kitten affected her brain in some way idk.
Haley, that does sound like an inbred cat. However, she must be a random bred cat which would make inbreeding unlikely. Inbreeding is the norm for purebred cats but very rare for moggies. Pooping around the house may be a medical problem (incontinence comes to mind) or a stress problem (marking territory through defecation). She is probably stressed because she is struggling to cope. Well done in rescuing her. My thought is that she needs to be seen by a veterinarian as soon as possible for a check-up. I am not a vet and I am guessing but she could be ill. Good luck.
I just got a tuxedo kitten the dad is the mothers,brother. She is about 16- 18 weeks old, I’ve noticed that she kinda sways, almost like she has been drinking. Normally she going 100 mph 24/7 tonight she’s just withdrawn all of a sudden she’ll start screaming.
Thank you for commenting. I strongly suspect that your kitten is very ill. I would implore you to take her to a veterinarian as soon as possible, please. Good luck to both of you.
I’m reading this article to see if any other inbreded cat owners are having the same problems as mine.he is severely underweight i can feel his bones but he eats all the time.most of his teeth have come out and he sleeps all the time and really has no interest in making friends with the other cats in the household.and he also never has solid poops. Not to be so graphic.
With all that said,the First thing i tell the very is that i refuse to put him down.it’s not an option. The has been close to death 3 times and each time right when i think this is it…he bounces back like Gotcha! he has picked me as his human and as much as i show my love he shows his.he acts like my guard dog.i was on the floor playing with my Pitt bull acting like i was hurt when out of nowhere here he comes flying off the couch.he sleeps in the crook of my arm every night and that’s my favorite.do others Havre the same qualities??
I just came back from the vet with my inbred little dude. He’s very sick and the problems are getting exponentially worse as the months go on. It started with diarrhea in September when we discovered his heart was enlarged. Then he started spraying and peeing everywhere after we put him on the i/d prescription diet for the diarrhea, which he did NOT like. Today we found out he has developed a heart murmur in the last two months, there’s a mass in his abdomen, and he’s having trouble pooping now. We have an appointment Friday for an ultrasound, they’re concerned the mass is cancer and they need to know if the heart problem is treatable. It could go either way at this point, with his problems being easily treatable or we’re looking at palliative care. It breaks my heart.
My little guy has lost a significant amount of weight the last couple months and he wasn’t big to begin with, his teeth are terrible, he’s always struggled with loose stool, he doesn’t clean himself so always stinks (think Pigpen from Charlie Brown), and is very, very sensitive/nervous. Any change in the household sets him in a downward spiral. He lost the genetic lottery, sadly, and even though he’s only 8-10 years old, he probably doesn’t have many years left.
Thanks for sharing, Elbie, but this is heartbreaking. Phew, he certainly did get a bad break on the genetic inheritance stakes. Best of luck to you both.