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The delightfully nerdy truth that this expurrt is basically saying that all cats start as tabbies. The default feline setting is stripes. Genetically, their fur pattern is built on something called the agouti system, which creates that classic light-and-dark banding along individual hairs. Now, when a cat inherits two copies of the recessive “solid” gene, things get dramatic. This gene essentially tells the agouti signaling protein to hush, which leads to an overproduction of eumelanin (dark pigment). The result is a black cat.
But plot twist: the original tabby pattern is still there. It’s just hidden under all that extra pigment, like a striped blueprint beneath a dark paint job. That’s why some black cats show “phantom” tabby markings in certain lighting - the stripes never left.
This also explains why red cats are always visibly tabby. Red pigment doesn’t produce the same eumelanin overload, so the stripes stay on display. As for random white hairs or little belly patches? Those are minor melanin production hiccups - tiny pigment glitches that make each cat uniquely customized.
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Ah, black smoke cats - the mysterious, gothic royalty of the cat world. From afar, they look like sleek, solid black cats straight out of a noir movie. Up close? Surprise! Each hair is a mini magic trick: dark tips overlaying silvery-white bases.
This happens because of the “incomplete masking” effect of the solid (or melanistic) gene. Essentially, the cat’s default tabby blueprint is still hiding underneath all that dark pigment, but instead of fully covering the lighter base, the black pigment only dominates the tip. The result is a smoky, ghostly shimmer as the cat moves, like it’s fading in and out of existence - perfect for dramatic napping in sunbeams or stalking shadows. You might even catch faint tabby stripes showing through, especially around the legs, tail, or face. This effect is similar to the “phantom tabby” phenomenon seen in other black cats, but taken to an elegant extreme.
In short, black smoke cats are genetic art: tabby by blueprint, black by gene, and smoky by sheer optical wizardry.
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